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sSf 12/17/MOC. ■ -- 

Jlh PARKE .- 

c,*- '■ '= '^A'lEiELL 
fcL. »V.<50 

IX 79903 


Twjn Falls, iaaho/95ih year, No. 336 



f CoODMO WMING 

Weather 

Today: Partly 
; dou^witha 
high of 44. 
Increasing 
clouds tonight, low, 30. . 

Pag 0 A 2 

l^dic Valley 

Mining ndes: Western polid* • 
dans are raising concerns 
about propc^ federd min- 
mgrules. 


50 cents 




steps into 



Florida lawmakers’ 
move dismays 
Gore supporters - 


By David S. Broder 

^ Washington Pi^ 


Tree tiroe: The Wood River 
yan^ is gearing up for its 
Fesd^oflVees. 

■ I . Page B 1 

Mining rules: Western politi- 
cians are raising concerns 
about proposed federd min- 
ing rules. 


Weekend 


Uon Coenty dapuUet stand guard outside ths Leon County courthouse fn 
TallshassM, Fla., on Thursday after a rental truck canying tome 430.000 
election balloti Palm 'Beach Courtty arrhed. 


WASHINGTON - Florida's 
Republican^/nrroUetJ legi-dature 
moved imo'jKKition Tliursday to 
bolster Ceor{^ W. Bush's claim to 
die state’s critical electoral votes 
as attorneys for Vice President 
Al Gore urged the supreme 
courts in Tallaiiassec and 
Washington D.C. to allow more 
balJot-coimting to proceed. ’ 

A select' committee of the legis- 
, lature-recommended that a spe- 
cial session convene next week to 


>^c.-cj(tp 

name a slate-of 25 Bu.di electors, 

Speaking out 


election in the state. 
Tn a clear sign of 1 


“threatens lo put us into a consii- 
-miional crisis.’’ 


Florida ballots last week. 

Although tiiose recounts did 
not overturn Bush’s earlier lead. 

Please see FLORIDA, Page A4 


Higher educatton 

report card 


Hero's bow Measuring Up 2000 
Ofodod Idaho »i Irvo portorruanco 

caiogortes on bighof oduc.ition. 

Pr*p«atJon How 

well the stale’s K-t£ 
schools p'upnro . 
studonu lor lunnor 
’ education. 


PartfdpaUon How 

mocfi stile fus- ienis 

D 

toko advantage of 
college, training.. 

Affordability How 

allordabio higher 

B- 

oducsiion is lor 
students and lamilies 

Complotlon How 

promptly stiidonis 

. complete dL-cifoes, | 

comlic.Yits ’ 

r 

Benefits Hov/ 
much the si.iio 
oonoliis licm ,1 i 

woll-cducaicd V 

r* 

I populal'un 

L 



Back to the Bard: The College 
.of Southern Idaho Theater 
Deparment presents 
“Hamlet";,-, 

■ * 

SKJkis 

Hoop gathering: The Arctic 
Circle Classic brought men’s 
college hoop teaihs from' 
across the country to IVvin 
yitiU Thursday. — ■ - 

' PageDl 

Later, Koetter: Media reports 
out of Oklah~oma have Boise 
Stated football coach leaving 
the Gera State. 

- PageDl 

Opinion ■ 

Corrupting Cratere: Crateis of 
the ^oon National Monument 
won't be “saved” by luring 
more visitors, todies editorial 
SJQrS. 

PageA 6 

Section by section 

Section A Section C 

Weatlier ... .2 WeckEtid . .W 

Nation 35 Movies 6 

fipiilon ....6-7 ' _ 

r. Section D 

Section B spoits . . . .1.5 

Magic VSIleyW Money.... SO 
Obituaries . . .2 

idaho/yvesi .4-5.. Section E 
Nation .... . .6 World J2„ 

■= gomi cs’ .7 Mflmingfafeah-3- 

DearAbby ...3 
i ■ ; Crossword'... 3 

5 ^ Class}fi^';3l6 



Local Republicans call on Gore to cbheede 


By MichaeUoumee 

Tlmefrftowa WTHer* 


TWIN FALLS - The fact that 
their plea couldn’t be heard in 
Washington, -D.c;. didn’t keep' 
them from speaking out. 

Even the lack' of an audience, 
save for a reporter and a news 
photographer, didn’t hurt their 


feelings. 

They think Vice President Al 
Gore should concede the presi- 
dency to Texas Gov. George W. 
Bush now, and they wanted to 
' tell him. 

“Al Gore is like a spoiled little 
boy who has lost a game of mar- 
bles,” said Maril)m Hcmplcmon, 
one of IS people who'gathered 


at the Twin Falls County 
Courthouse Thursday night to 
call on Core to give up his figlit 
for the White Hiiu.se. 

“He’s throwing a temper 
tantrum. My cliildren u-sed to be 
spanked for that." she said of 
Gore. 

Hcmplcraun and the small 
group of GO? faithful huddled 


Burley man faces charges 
of vehieular manslaughter 

Three pwple died in 
automobile accident 


By Rutir.Streeter 
Tlme»New» writar 


. Wsjittgngeqdadpq^' 

- ftainn^Ri^ i 


; Classified 

Log on to ... 

^jgrhelmieslSEwi; 

r.. for online classlfled ai 

733^31 

*' orinOurfey 

: 677-4042 


BURLEY - A Burley man has 
been charged with three misde- 
meanor Counts of vehicular 

Nov. 13 accident that kjlled 
three people. ' 

' Donald Westfall, 71, faces 
prison lime and a fine if convja- 
edvond could be forced to pay 
ehud siippori for the two children 
whose parents were killed in the 
-wreck. -T-; • — .1 
tWostfall. ’was summonedi 
Wednesday to appear at a Dec 
18 airai^tment in 5th Judicial 
Distria magistrate court 
Westfall coidd nQt be reached 
for comment .Thursday, because 
he was in Boise undergoing “a 
medtcal'procedure.^said Ms -. 
attorney, Richard Smith; Smith 
declined', to comment on the 
chargesjnkhe had not yet talked 
wlth.WehM. 

. . .rdiw to a sworn affidavit' 
sighed by . Cassia . County. sherifCs . 
'depDt)^Dbb‘T7feoh;'Westfall 
drove throu^ a' stop sign at 250 
E. 100 S., and epUided .with a 
Bulclc Regal driven by Rafael 
SUva-Alcjos, 3^ of Burley. 


. SUva-Alejos and his nearly 2- 
year-old .son, Eduardo Sflra. died 
■ at ilie.scene. SUva-Alcjos* wife, 

' ^'p6rana Silva. 25, who was 35 
weeks.pregnnnt, died later ihai 
evening on the way to a Utah 
hospital. 

Before Esperanza Silva was 
boarded on a helicopter to Ihe 
Utah hospital, emergency room 
physicians at Cassia Regional 
— MedlcalXonteiTlellVci^dTjcr— 
baby, a boy, by pcrlorming a suc- 
cessful Caesarean section. 

The accident occurred “with- 
out gross negligence” and does 
not. constitute a felocy.-according 
Co the criminul coihplauit signed 
by Green. • 

If convicted on all charges. . 
Westfall can receive up to ilirce 
years in prison and o- maximum 
$6,000 fine.. 

The judge could also order 
WestfaU to pay child support for 
the SSvas' two children - the new- 
, bom boy and 6-ycar-old Alex Silva 
• - until they are' 18 years old. 
Failure lo pay the child support is 
enforceable by the same laws gov- 
emiiig traditional child support 
orders. ‘ 

Alex Silv:^ a passenger in Silvo- 
AlejosLcor^ was injured in tjtc 
crash and hospitalized. Also 
injured was passenger Neopolo ‘ 

Rios, 32, Esperanm Silva’s brotfuy. - 
Please see CHARGB,f^e A 2 ! • 



Mixed 

marks 


TclaFogcBmcdiocrc 
grades for liijnhcrcd 

By Jennifer Sandmann 
Times-Ncws writer and 
The Associated Press 


against tile cold m the request of 
the Twin Falls County 
Republican Women, who put the 
gathering together in conjunc- 
tion with similar rullie.s orches- 
trated hy Republican .women’s 
groups acros.s the nation. 

“I really think this is a media 

Please see REPUBLICANS, Page A2 


TWIN FAI.LS - -Idaho 
received average and below- 
average grades in a narional 
report, fociising on ticcv.ss to 
•higher education and whether 
students are pieii.ired for stud 
ies beyond high sdiooi. 

rii-v k.i'.il .'Unly Ly 

The Natii'in.il Ceniei for I’uhlic 
Policy and Higher Education, a 
nonpartisan think tank in San 
Jose, Ciilif,. was re^-ased 
Thursday in W'.isliirigton.T).C.' 

Slates were not ranked or 
c 0 m pared, 

siate received a 


.Dressed for siicc:r.ss 


through F 
five areas. No slate n'ceiveil 
straiglit .\'s, 

The’ report. ".Measuring Up 
2DU0.’' says imblic colleges in 
Idaho are among the most 
affiirdnhle in tlie nation, with 
tuition costs ai the public four- 
year sclumls averaging S2v2(X), 
Idaho earned average grailes 
for the perceni.ige of suidi-nts 
finishing - illege. and the bene- 
fiis education has contributed to 
the State’s ecomimv ami civic 
life. 

The stale scored holmv ovet- 
.ige in the minilie r of seaindary 
sL'IiooI students taking rigi'i'mis 
college jUeli.iraiury C()urse^. -md 

Pie.isc sec GRADES ~.yeA2 

Study: Li beru I arts 
majors ha\ c hope 
in job market 

The Associat ed P^oss 

DETROIT - j.ib prospects 
haven't bceii'tliis good for liberal 
arts graduates m ye.irs 
I.ilier.il arts gr.idiiaies can 
expeci ID 1)0 more fervently 
.sought aller this year ami to be 
offered belter-s;ilaries. -iccoriiing 
to the .tOtli antiiial recruiting 
trends siirt-ey conducted hy the 
Collegiate luii ploy m e n i 
Rosearcli Insiiiiue at Micliigan 
State I'niversity. 

Among the reasons: The earli- 
er-thaii-predictei! relireincnls of 
the oldest hahy i)oomers have 
created job openings of all kinds. 

Also, wiiii the lugh-ledi indus- 
try IxMnning, Terri l.aMarco. asso- 
ciate director for cinplbyeTTelii- ' 
lions a'l ihe Lniversity of 
Michigan, said empltryeis in 
recent years have changed their ' 
attitudes alxuit lilrcnd arts majors. 

“1 think wh.it they are seeing is ' 
that liberal arts majors can fill- 
sorne of die |X)siiions that u.seil to 
be considered lechmcal," ‘ 
LaMarco said. For example, they 
can be trained to do program- 
. Please see MAJORS. Pago A2 




I 




A-2 TlmafrMem, Twin FtOi,- Idaho Friday, Oeccnber 1, 2000 


FORECAST FOR MAGIC VALEEY 


gj> IDAHO ALMANAC 


Idaho Extnmot 
7*^11 Yeatorday: . 

”'8'’ 

Payono 

'flLSkT^ Low r 

DoorFlat Dam 

:f/:3852^ 

^^SwOlton '•' J38/23 




' . r '*; TWIN FALLS • .-r- 

- \4WQl 

REGIONAL CITIES 


, > ■ ' ' Idaho Fail* 

. 3«20 ... 

.* ' /tPocateltol 


All maps, (oro* 
casts and data 
provided by 

AceuWeathor, 
IrK. 02000 


. Today S 
City HI Lo W HI I 

Boiso <16 32 pc 46 : 

EJonnuir. Forry 37 3t c , 40 2 

Outicy 45 25 pc 47 < 

CoourO'AIcno 36 32 c 40 2 

Elko 45 22 pc 47 2 

Eugcfif. OR 50 40 sH SO •: 

Hngcrmnn ^ 47 28 pc 48 2 

Idaho F.nis 30 20 pc 40 2 

Kalir.poN. MT 30 20 e 40 2 

Lowislon 44 36 c 46 2 

Malad 39 24 pc 43 2 

39 23 pc 47 2 


City . I 

WcCdIt 3 

Missoula. MT 3 

PoCAlotlo 3 

Parllartd, OR S 

Richland. WA 4 

Solrrwn 3 

Salt Lako Oty. ITT 4 
Soalilo. WA 5 

Spokarw. WA 3 

Stanley 3 

Sun Valley 3 

Yollowsiono. MT 2 



bobcevf 


eeiuipment- 


FIVE-DAY FORECASTTOR TWMFALLS 


Tain FiOi through 6 pjrt ynterday 
Temperature . 

Kljyvtew 45‘/28* 

Normal Nghrlow 4f/23* ' 

HJgMow last year ; 65*/35*. 

- Record high - 65*-lfi 1009 

Record ksw -r In 1070 

Precipitation 

24 hours ondkig 6 p.m. yest trace 

Monlh 10 dal# 0.3T 

Normal monih lo dale ...1.22* 

Year lo dale 7.4r 

Normal year lo dale 0.37* 

Humidity 

Yesterday at noon MX 

Barometric Preeaure 

Yesterday at 8 p m 3032 In. 

Po^llen yeoterday In TWIn Folio 

'Grass Absent Woods Absdhi 

Trees Absot^i .Mold Atow 

Source: Asthma ettd Allergy et Idaho 



i Becoming mostly I 
cloudy. I 


Cloud and brooks 
-ofsun;itmay 
aho^r. 

A46* T 30" 


NATIONAL EXTREMES 

High 81* in Miami, FL Low 

NATIONAL WEATHER 


Ystterdey (lor Ihe 4fi contguous stiles) 
Low >5* In South Pass, WY 


highs lor the day Forecast lugn/tow temperatures at 


m.M 


msmmm 

Iflunw .'■'t r .J. , /-* > vTi is 




Amfxturoof 

-ctouOsand- 

suishlno. 

A46" ▼30" 

Intervals ot.ciouds 
ondsunshlno. 

A 48" T 28" 


~AccuWeather.com 


CANADIAN CITIES 

Today ’ SaC 

aty 1 HI Lo W .HI L» W 
Catgary. " r'Z7‘'23“pd'"44' 12| po 

Cranbrook 32 23-rf — 34-15 an 

Edmonton ' '28~28 'pd "TO Iff P* 
Kelowna '41 32 in ' 43 2S c 
latttoridgo : -41 34' pd-'-'-KS-^lff ah 
Regino 22 10 pc 35 2^ m 

Saskatoon X '19 pc‘”'37'2> an 

Toronto, 25*8' pc' '2S'l2 pc ' 

Itaricouvof '60"X'i ^48' 3fc c 

Victoria 51 38 r 4a '3(fsh 

Winnipeg' ' '12 '3 pc' X 20. pc 


REGIONAL WEATHER ' 

Southern Idaho; Today vrio foaturo a rhMuro of clouds and sunshJno as an area of 
high prossuro remains in control, incroaslng ctoudinoss tonight with a rain or snow 
shower possible. ' ‘ 

BoIm: Sunshine will mbi wi^ seme ctouds this morning, but douds will move into 
the region this oflemoon; a shower or two around later today or lonIghL Mostly 
cloudy tomorrow with showers posstoio. 

Horthom Nevada: Intorv^ ot ctouds and sunshine today, then partly to mostly 
cloudy tonight. Tomorrow' wilt leaturo tlmos ot ctouds and somo sunshine^ 

Northern Utah: Today wiPtonluroomhduro ^clouds and sunshJno across the 
state. Partly cloudy and cold tonighl. Intonmls ot clouds and sunshine tomorrow; 
perhaps a shower. 

Northern Idaho: Sunshine loltowod by Incroosing cloudinoss today; a rain or snow 
shower possible later today or tonight. Highs this altemoon gonorally in tho 30s. 






SUN AND MOON WORLD CITIES 

■ Sunrise today ajti. Today a 

Sunset tonight 5d)6p.m. . City ■ HI Lo W , W I 

^Moohrfso today 12:17 p.rh. • Acapiicd ^ X 7 S « OO'T 

Moonsot tonight 10:12p.m. Athona .®3..A9..pc__ 64 ^4 

First FuO l^t Now Bon^S? BI ra c ■ go 7 
JSik -tm ’49'x:ah"‘’40'1 

Berlin .&« 48 pc » 4 

• BuenoaAlres 01 Ms '61 < 

D«:3,D«,. DOC, 7 '-Jj, ,..g 1 

UV index TODAY JohameabuTg 78 58 X ! 

London 55 47 r M 4 

’Si ^ MoxleoCItv TO 4rk— '70 4 

7 " ' . Moscow X 31 an X 2 

T Paris 54 45 C '*» 3 

2 PkJdoJanoiro 77 68_ah 77 7 

fl i-r* I 4 ^ Porno X 48'pc '64'! 

Sun. 10am. Noon 2plh. 4pm. Seoul X 40_ s . 55 4 

0>t, MinlRuil:2‘3, Low;4.6. Modoroto; 7-9, ^So^ X M ^ ft 4 

High; 10«, Very High. Values urdicato tho Warsaw 48" 41' c' "' S2' 4 

oxposuro to the sun's ultniviolot roys. Zurich 52 42 a 48 4 

NATIONAL CITIES 


51 '34 pc Memphis ' 

40 16 B Miami ' 

41 21' a MlwaulcM 


Today Stf.- 

M Lo W HI L^ V 
1S7-34"'pc'*'48 '’2*' p 
79 W pc TO ed. c 
’■‘34 33 'C- X' 23‘ 8 
X 34 4>e 48 28 , c 


54 X pc NewOrteohs '' 65 44" s 


X X B NowYork 40 26 pc X 2C s 

X X pc Oklahoma CRy 45 X s 48 ' 24* s 

X 24 pc Omaha X 21 - sn 37 2C c 

X X sf Oriando 74 48 s ’ 75 51* p 

X.21 s Philodolphla 40 X pc X 2r s 

52 X 8 Phoenix TO 64 s 78 4b s 

X 18 c Portland. ME 37 19 s X 1«; s 


X 23 c X 22 s Raleigh 

X X s X X c RapidC 

•7' .19'tl ".11 -22 pc Reno 

24 14 c j*! 19 pc Soernm 


42 pc San DIogo 


X 32 pc 52 27 pc Tucson 


48 X s 42 2^ 8 

X IB pc 46 24' p 

54 X pc’ 57 X B 

X 39 pc 59 37 p 

40 X sn 37 X p 

X 13 c X 19' p 

44 X a 47 X. p 

65 52 pc 65 49 p 

X 46 e 69 47, p 

52 42 sh 48 40> 8 

75 X a 73 44 a 

7 44 X pc 40 X 8 


Loo Angeles X ' X pc X X s Washington. DC 44 X pc 40 X s 
— Weather OY)ra-8unny.-pc-parltycloudyrc-tioudy.-ah'ShowBrs7Mh u ndei s t tt in 3. ' f f B in; — 
at*sriow PuniBs. an'enow. l4eo. > 


Republicans 

' Continued from A1 
event,” Ilomplemiin -saiti just 
before slie and Twin i'till.s ' 
County IteiMiblican Women 
Chairman Sharon Block .spoke 
to the group. “It's lo get people 
involved.' ti makes them 
think." 

After Block and llempleman 
spoke, tlie group snng.“God 
Bless America" with frosty 
hreaih. 

Tluirsday’s courthouse gather- 
ings are part of a larger effort by , 
Bush, ilte national Itepublican 
Party and conservative allies lu 
pressure Gore into conceding to 
his COP rival.' • 

Using the tools of modern 
technology, they are targeting 
. Gore through talk radio, e-mails, 
street protests and his fellow 
Democrats on Capitol Hill. In 
blunt, often briitiil language 
reminiscent of the rbeioric 
aimed at President Clinton dur- 
ing bis iinpeacbmcm, Gore is' 
portrayed as a "win at any cost” 
sore loser with a penchant for 
lying and a death wish for his 
party. 

“He LOST already! Why can’t 
he undersliiiul?” blare.^a mes- 
sage on the Web .site 
Freereptiblic.coin. Tho coriseiw’a- 
live site, which backed such 
.anti-ClinioM figures as Linda 

Charges 

Continued from A1 

Corey Westfall, Donald 
Wesifair.s lS-year-ol<i grandson, 
was in Donald Westfall's car' at 
time of the acddeni and was not 
injured, accor'rling to a Cas.sia 
. Cminiy accideni report. 

Deputy prosecuior Howard 
Smyser has excu.sed liini.seif from 


Tripp and Rep. Robert L. Barr 
Jr., R-Ga., is organizing protests, 
hosting online chats and selling 
“Gore Lpserman” T-shirts. 

Born out of what they say 
were the painful lcs.sons of the 
Clinton scandals, when the 
president was able to stay in 
office despite being impeached. 
Republicans are aggressively 
moving to shape public opinion 
to deprive Gore of the broad 
.support needed to sustain a 
legal challenge in Florida. 

Some efforts have been care- 
fully orchestrated - House 
Republican aides, for instance, 
have been markeilng ihelr boss- 
es to television executives. In 
several cases the Bush campaign 
itself has directed its troops to 
fan the anti-Gore flames. Other 
efforts, meanwhile, appear to 
have emanated from the grass 
roots. 

“It’s a spontaneous combus- 
tion," said Rep. Mark Edward 
Soucler, R-Ind. "Everybody is 
doing eveiyihing they can think 
of.” 

Tihics-A'cics political reporter 
Michael Joumcc can be reached at 
(208) 735-323}, or by e-mail at 
nijatirjjee<^mai;icvdUcy.com. The 
Associated Press contributed to 
(his ayxin. 


Creed, Bon Jovi win top 
honors at VHl awards 


LOS ANGELES (AP) - 
Newcomer Creed and r^ wars 
veteran Bon Jovi were among the 
winners in the "My VHl Music 
Awards' Thursday, with cate- 
gories designed and decided by 
viewers voting online. 

It was a coming out party for 
Creed, wzhich came into the 
show with a leading nine nomina- 
tions. The band was given the' 
breakout award 'Welcome To 
The Big Time.” 

— Wc gOLninc.nominations. 
We're preny much nominated for 
everything. Wc can't complain," 
Scott Stapp, the group's lead 
singer, said shortly after accept- 
ing the award. 

Since VHl’s target audience of 
25-to-34-year-oIds is older than 
MTV's demographic, the awards 
show was a comparatively sedate 
affair. But ir still offered a few 
memorable, if not raunchy, 
moments. 

.Host John Leguizamo opened 
the show with an Eminem-stylc 
rap, making sexual innuendoes 
about Britney Spears, Mandy 


Majors 


any involvement in prosecuting 
the ca.se due to a personal con- 
flict. 

Tinus-News writer Ruth Streeter 
can be reached at the Mini-Cassia 
Bureau at 677-4042, Ext. 109, or 
hy e-mail at rstri’cterl&fnflgi'eual- 

fciil.CONI 

.. S uiiil.i ) S7 tm , pri . wcc k_Jail y . on ly S5X 

Wul.Kk, drn.l..lion ilirtci... » P" 

■ S;ilcs 1,11 included in - jII above ralel. A 

Circiiliiiioii |)lionc linos :'iro opt-n i'ti.u>!c will be levied for all 

boiwoon 7 .md 10 n.m, only. II yon fciimtcd checks. 

<lo mil roLoivo yinir paper hy 7 ii.m., 

latl tlid nnmbor lor vour Mail infonTiaclon 

lturlov'itni>orl' 

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Newsp.i|<cis Inc. I’criodicals’ paid a) Twin 

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■ c.iuniy newspaper pursuani lo Section 6C- 

Home .Ichu'ts .Lilly an, I .S.imlay, $4.20 [ok Uaj,,, Code. Ttiunday 1» hereby 
per ucck S.imljy .mly, S2.(X) |.ci week, designated omIk day .if ihe week on which 
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pi? w'el.r\'io. ors';“^^ 

Tiincs-Ncsys telephone directory ,i 

Circululiun (Daniel Walock, Cirailntion Director) . .Ext. 1 

Clas.sinL-d Advertising (Deby Johnson, Manager) '. £xt. 2 

News (Clark Walworth, Managing Editor) Ext. 3 

Retail Advertising (Mike Smit, Advertising Director) Ext. 4 

Ag Weekly (Janet Coffin, General Manager) . . '.Ext. 5 

Publisher Stephen Hangcn Ext. 249 


Continued from A1 
ming, she said. 

A total of 360 employers, pri- 
marily in the manufacturing and 
professional services sectors, ' 
responded to the .survey, released 
today. 

Continuing a four-year period 
of frenzied growth, the job mar- 
ket for students receiving under- 
graduate or advanced degrees of 
any kind in 2001 will expand 6 
percent to 10 percent compared 
with the year before, the survey 
found. It gave no breakdown for - 

— thosewith-libcral-Qrts degrees. 

. Much of the expansion will - 
take place at mcga-companics - 
those with 3,500-pIus employees. 
Those corporadon$ are expected 
to expand hiring by 66 percent, 
an increase that will cross all 

^TheTlmciMcws ^ 

Information 


Moore and Christina Aguilera. — 

. "Tve been to bed with Britney. 
I’ve been to bed with Mandy. I- 
couldn't get Christina, so I did 
■■• her broUjer Andy," he sang. 
.'/-T-Aguilera anl^pears, who was 
accompametTby 'N Sync’s Justin 
Timbcrlake, were both in the 
audience. 

Musical performances by U2^ 
who opened Uic show with their 
new sin^c 'Beautiful Day,' and 
Bon Jovi-brought the audience to 
..itsfecL . .. 

Bon Jovi won the Video of The 
Year award for "It’s My Life," 
which the group also performed 
during the ^ow. - 

"Wc’vc been around longer 
than VHl,' lead singer Jon Bon 
Jovi said, accepting lus award. 

Carlos Santana,, who has also 
been around longer than VHl, 
won the Man of The Year award. 

"Hopefully 1 can win the father 
of the year awardmext year. I’m 
going to work really, really hard 
and not upset my children or my 
wife,"' the veteran rocker said 
backstage. 


degree levels. Last year, large 
companies reported that they 
planned to expand hiring 21 per- 
cent. 

Engineering and computer sci- 
ence graduates, who have had it 
good for several years, will con- 
tinue to have it good, according 
to the survey. 

They will still land at the top of 
the pay scale with their starting 
salaries, earning between $45,0(X) 
and $50,000. Programmers will 
be in particular demand: Their 
starting salaries arc expected to 

~$4VTO.*^ ^ 

Graduates at the more modest 
end of the hiring pay scale, such 
as liberal arts majors, will sec 
their average starting salaries 
push into the lower $30,000s. 

CaiT 

734-6326 


: Report cards 

T bt National Cantor for PsWe PoOey and Hl|har Educatton graded states, jxt 
aspects of their conege and university systems; In the table, states are grad- 
ed OR preparing students for xiiege; pohldpation of residents ages IS to 4« in 
xllegfi or other post-secondaiy training: affordabla xliege costs: how promo^ 
xllcge students xmplete degrees; and economic and social benefits to w 
state as a result of Its residents’ education. ■ ' '! 

' Hera's bow Westomstatos scone 


. Stoto 

PlWion 

D«0W* ''' 

Paitidpatkii ARordablOty ccontoHen BeasOto 

'Alaska 



c 

.... f 

<.-B I" 

Callfomls. 

j.Ct.LLii. 


"'A, ■ 




Of •••>•> 

. rOc'»' 


, C .V-I 

'C-, 

Moritana 

.■'B-..':- ■ 

■ -tH- ■ ' 

' t>- , 

•r .C . - 

• ®0 

Nevada 

0*—,. 

Of 

B 

F 

O.v 

-Ore^ . 

' C-" ■ ■ ■ 

D 

• O’ . 

C 

' c*.< 


A, 

. c . 

A 

Ot : 


.Wa^lngton 

- ' 

0; 

■ 

B- • 



Report cwds were based on statisti cs for each state; largeiy'.from the,lf.$. 
Census Bureau and the U.S. Education DepartmepL The most rec^t figu(^ 
were from 1998, end Included vocational and technical schools and tw(5 
four-)«or hstltutJofis. 


Gracies 

Continued from A1 

the number of residents attend- 
ing post-secondary schools. 

Idaho education officials got 
their first look -at the grades 
HfUrsday. 

Gregory Fitch, executive direc- 
tor of the State Board of 
Education, cautioned against 
using the report to ovcr-gcncraT- 
izc, and said the report idcndiicd 
issues that arc already a focus. 

“I can’t see an area that Idaho 
isn’t working on, fully aware of, 
andresponding to,” Fitch said. 

Idaho’s goals . include 
increased opportunities to 
attend college, increased state- 
supported scholarships and 
financial aid, and improved 
minority recruitment 
. The study said more Idaho 
high school students must take 
advanced courses needed to suc- 

:ceed In'MlIcge: 

Marilyn Howard, Idaho’s 
superintendent of public instruc- 
tion, said Idaho’s educatocs are 
diligently working on that 
“The report fails to take Into - 
account the considerable work 


LOUERY 

WEATHER 

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FORECAST 

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LOnOblOWO FASTS 


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2 

(Xf 

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1 4 20 27 29 

POWmMLL WWtBOl 17 
'mursdsy, Nov8(nb«r 90, numbsr* 


that has been done in Idoh^to 
make coursework more rigop^ 
and more responsive, to postt^- 
ondary job or school needi,” 
Howard said in a prepared 
ment. 

‘ Idaho is working to ipered^e 
achievement standards in all ip- .. 
domic areas, including math .and 
science, she said. 7 : 

Idaho is among nine West^ 
"States participating in a thric- 
year federal grant to.imp^e 
high school Advanced Pbceiz^t 
programs. AP classes allow 
dents to test for college cr^t. 
The grant will provide $M,G0^in . 
, its Hrst year in Idaho, payin^or- 
* teacher training and fina^al 
assistance to hElp low-ince^e 
students pay for the $75 tests.'^; 

In every state, poor studmts 
and minorities fared the worst’in 
getting a higher educatioiL 


Tirnes-iYeuts education repojw 
Jennifer Sandmann can be rcaSipd 
at 733-0931, Ext 241, ’orbyo^a 
at ;sandrmmn@magiciu/kyxoffl- 


WBdMtday, NovWntMT 29. nurebBTs '3 • 


TIiurad8y,No*8(nb«rXl.nuaifaw« •-* i 


Check your Poyverball tickets! 3 

On Wednesday, Idaho had two $ 100,000 winn^sj^ 
The winning PbwefhaH ticket was from New Mexico; 

W18«TWWO»qgntlWe»IUIlOB m4 B MIW «IT>8riWO><C U OeWiCtT<tnifl«« M P »B^ ML« 



Fridiy. DK«nb«r 1. 2000 Twin F«0t, Idaho «' 


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NaIton. 



Study: School problems can signal trouble 

WASHINGTON fAPT- Mom w of i..j 


W ASHI NGTO N (AP)_- Mom_ 
and Dad were ri^t: Flunliig In 
school and hanging' out with a bad 
crowd lead to trouble. 

. So says a national survey that 
finds oil adolescents - black, vdiite 
or Hispanic, rich or poor - ore 
much more likely to drink alcohol, -• 
cany or use weapons, smoki dga- • 
rettes or have sex if they spenoa 


-lot.oLunsupervised-timo-with 

frieiids and have academic prob- 

, lems. ; 

“If we ma)ce predictions about 
kids based on the color of their 
sJdn, 'based on their parents’ bank 
account or how many parents they 
live with, we're only going to be 
right a tiny percent of the time,” 
Dr. Robert Blum, the study’s prin- 


Source: Scientist tossed 
tapes into lab’s garbage 


— dpal investigator, saldThursday.— 
Blum said that while the 
—amourn of “risky" bchavlor teens” 
engage in varies between radar 
and economic groups and those 
with different family structures, 
those factors have little influence 
on an individual teen’s actions. 
Problems with schoolwork and 
hanging out excessively with 


- ftiendsrcspecJallythosc“whTr' 

drin k ai c oliol , arc far greater 
"warning sigas. •' . ' 

The f icicrally funded survey of 
about 10, OM) high school students 
al.s'o found that in the past year 
more than one in four youdis has. 
canied-u weapon or been exposed 
to violence involving a gun or knife 
as a witness, a victim or .in attacker. 


' ALBUQUERQUE, MJtt (AP) - 
Sdentist Wen Ho Lee says he dis- 
carded 17 computer tapes full of 
nuclear weapons data at Los 
Alamos National Laboratory, 
according to a source familiar 
with the cose. 

FBI agents are combing the 
muddy, snowy. Los Alamos 
County landfill where lab trash is 
buried, saying the search could 
last weeks. 

Agents won't confirm they’re 
looking-for the discarded tapes in 
the landfill, but if the pocket- 
sized computer cartridges Lee 
downloaded in the lab's toj>-secret 
X Division were throtvn into the 


trash, the 50-acre dump Is a likely 
place where they ended up. 

. Agents have said for months 
that they want to find the tapes 
Lee swore he destroyed. 

A source familiar with the case, 
speaking on condition of 
anonymity, told The Associated 
Press on Wednesday that Lee 
sold he disposed of the tapes in a 
Dumpster inside the X Division 
fence in Januaiy 1399. 

^The dispbsaf of the tape car- 
tridges happened just days after 
Lee’s security clearance was 
revoked, according to a timetable 
provided last summer by federal 
prosecutors. 


Study: Bone marrow helps "brain 


Ih Charlotte, N.C., from nearly 
thrm decades of court oversight, 
saying there are still vestiges of 
se^egation in the nation’s first 
' -^Inajor urban district to use bus- 
to achieve radal balance. 

. ' A divided three-judge panel of 
.'the 4th U.S. Circuit of Appeals 
’largely overturned a federal 
judge’s ruling last year that held 
that the school system is integrat- 
ed and that race should no longer 
be considered when assigning 
students to schools. 

Seven white parents had sued 


vuumy senool sys- 
tem. Busing was first ordered by 
a federal judge in‘I969 and was 
upheld by the U.S. Supreme 
Coun in 1971. 


WASHINGTON (AP) - 
Researchers have discovered 
thattransplanted bone marrow 
cells can migrate to the brain and 

- . . 1 - *rmm turn into neurons, a dram.itic lab- 

The tpKO thuttJe Endeavour IlfU off from Cepe CanavenI, Fie., Thureday car- oratory finding that may offer 

. . . brain disorders. 

- Court; City remains segregated lists, using different methods and 

•,i’. ^ ® ® . different strains of mice, have'-- 

, RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - A fed- to end federal desegregation demonstrated that transplanted 

appeajs court Th ursday o versig ht in the C harlotte- marrow ceils can transform 

free the school system Mecklenburg County school sys- theraselves'naturally mto rieiT~ 

m Charlotte. N.C.. from n^nrlv r,>m Ttneino (me r.'.e> u.. rons — brain cells that carry nerve 

.impulses - and install themselves 
seamlessly into the brain. 

However, it could take years 


before the researchers can prove 
that such transplants can be 
effective and safe for treating 
human brain disorders, they said. 

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Available at the Hislork Old Townc Office, 

■ 113 Shoshone Street Mirth • 733-3434 

Downtown this year— 

FESTIVAL OF TREES. 

— DECEMBER 6-10 
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Thanks to the Magic Valley .Regional 4 
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Tlmes^ewi, Twin Falli, lda^o .Fri<tsy, D«cember 1, 2000 

~Flori~da ~ ^ 

Continued from A1 he broadcast 

the Gore camp i s huping 'for aj cabl e news sta 

Jijiprerre Cmin niling that wlnifd Thursday, . 

bolster the Democrat’s plea for diverted by he 
patience while the legal contests > a yellow Rydt 
cuiitiniit). For his part, Bush rying lumdrei 

— wanis-the^upreme-Cmirtlo rein* ballots-from 

force his claim that the election Tallahassee, v, 

-has-bccn dccidcdrThc court scs- state court 

sion will not be open to television another recou 
cameras, hut an audio tape will up enough' 


he broadcast on both radio and 

cabl e news sta tions. ^ : 

Thursday..TV..viewers werc- 

diverted by helicopter pictures of 
a yellow Ryder rental truck car- 
rying hundreds of thousands of 
'ballots-from~Palm‘ Beach to“ 
Tallahassee, where Gore hopcs^a 
"State court judge will order” 
another recount that could turn 
up enough -missed votes to 


reverse the apparent victory of 
__lhe Texas governor. . . 

Bush continued to act as if thc' 
political verdict were in, meeting 
at his- Crawford, Texas, ranch 
with his running mate, Dick 
“CheneyVand retired General 
Colin Powell, expected to be sec- 
rcta^ of state in a possible Bi^ 
Cabinet. Powell said the job had 
not (teen offered to him, but that 


- seemed to be a mer6 formality if 
and v^n Bush can finnly estab- - 

— fish his claim to-being prestdent-- 
clect. 

Reports -from the Bush 
entou rage _ identified_ 
' - Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Ridge 
and former Indiana senator Dan 
Coats as possibQc choices to run 
the Pentagon. 

Please see ELECTION, Page A5 



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Save an extra 10% all day Saturday 




Now 35.99 

Misses and Petite 
Sag Harbor Wool Jacket 


c..Reg. 19.99-24.99. Misses Sportswear 
and Petite Place.. 



A. Sale 13.99-40.50, reg. 19.99-54.00. Assorted 
names and styles. ' 


Ipl!%a3^!^pndiels'*',/ 
llEs^'tfTOd;itiprer 


c. Sale 16.80-34.80. reg 28.00-58.00. Assorted 
styles and colors m vinyl and microliber. 




D. Sale 20.30-56.00. reg. 29.00-80.00. 
Misses Sportswear. 

Stiiclion may vify by Mor«, 


B. Orig. 70.00, then 49,99. Misses 8-18, 
petite 4p-I6p. 

Nnl .il tjcllc^r Srl<?clion m,iy v.ify byston; 


ve 25! 

Il^ly: Entire 
;ses Charter Cjme?*' 
rino Sweaters? ' 


E. Sale 22.49-29.99. reg. 29.98-39.98. 
Better Sportswear. . 



Bfc! 

^'iChainis 


H. Sale 9.00-90.00, reg. 20.00-200.00. saoction 
may vary by store. iii%s.iv 

1)11 i')i- .ilrFafly-fcbutcii Mif pnop. 


lT> 




J. Naturalucr Cuff Reg, 89.99. Block Icothor. -K.-Sale 9.00-27'00, reg. 20,00-60.00. 

Selection may vary by store 






r Bfl[Non[ya 
ff fEntire'’Swg 
— ^ Charter jClfl 
R'^Fia n n e I S le| P'5 


LSale 20.10-26.80, reg. 30.00-40.0 
Sizes s-m-l. Cotton. 




ye 40,, 

^iJ^EnOTe|Stock Modei 
M'lUDtsuits for Misi 
Petites and 1 
|S‘<; i^i^SSlooien’s Worll 


F. Sale 63.40-72,00. reg. 09.00-120.00 Dress 

Deportment. Seleclion may vsryby iloi-v. 


, 30 »» 
;Entl|eStSc 
Plu5^ 



flEE 


ppiga- 
Sdenform- 
Bali- 
pWarner’s. 
3iVanity Fair- 


M. Sale 16.80-20.80, reg. 24.00-:29.00. 


Regular prices are offering prices and may not have resulted in actual sales. Selection may vary by store. 'lo«cm Pn«oi 


ihc Seaton’ relert lo Ihe period balMten Auguil 1 and December 2i. 2000. 


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I pie Tmm gO^vemoHia 
, tlose 'tcTclalinirig vicioiy, and 

E Thursday he told re^ners that 
■ jSvhen the counting finally stops, 
mnt to be prcpared to lead 
nation. That’s v/hat we were 
ed to do - the sooner the bet- 
ter for the good of the country." 
j But the continuing legal chal- 
lenges from Gore' prompted a ' 


. select committee of the Florida 
.. House'.and Senate, both with 
GOP majorities, to recommend 
Thursday a s^dal session that 
could authori 2 <^seleclipn.of_a_ 
slate of R^blican el^brs. 

The party-line committee vote, 
8 to 5, is expeaed to prompt the 
GOP leaders of the legislature to 
convene such a session next 
Tuesday. Gore strategists said 


privately that they expect the leg- 
islature to certify, the Bush elec- ' 
toral slate by Wednesday, but it 
is not clear whether the action - 

.wlll.^Jn.tbeTonn of lg gi<l.itinn 

requiring a signature by Florida 
Gov. Jeb Bush (R>, the nominee’s 
yoimger brother. Jeb Bush said 
he is prepared to sign such a bill 
“I can’t recuse myself from my * 
constitudonal dudes as governor 


of the state a h~gT can’t recuse 
myself, irariklyi of b’eing'my 
brodua^sbrother either," he said. 

— pie Florida Republicans are 
-acting under a provision of feder- 
al law allowing a state legislature 
to adopt such a procedure if elec- 
tors have not been determined by 
the popular vote in the normal 
fashion by Dec. 12. the statutory 
deadline for naming them. 



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734-7759 or 430-3O28-1 s«ngbcrgQpin (.0 


Our BIGGEST SALE of the year features the LOWEST PRICES of the 


season 


BON 16 HOUR SALE 

SATURDAY ONLY: 8 A.M. to MIDNIGHT 



L BONonly: Charter Club* 1/311" White Goose 
ecoDown" Comforter Reg. 250.00-300.00. White 
Sate 179.99 any size. Washable. 


M. Charter Club* Reg. Price Flannel Sheets and 
Ouvet Cavers Now U.99-59.99 reg 30 00- 
1 20.00. White Sale 1 9.99-79.99. L.m,tcd to *io<k on h„. 


N. Oljmipla 4-Piece Luggage Set Reg. 2D0.DD. 18". 
22" and 26" rolling uprights and tote Black. 600- 
denier polyester. Lugg^oc not jv^iUiblr inau;;,r.4:c- 


p. Entire Stock Ci ystal Gifts Shown: BONonly 
■ Ruffles" or Beehive" vases closeout 24.99, 
orig.. 60.00, then 29.99, 


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c/o Warranty Office. P.O. Box 12510. Seattle. WA 981 1 1-9975. Lowest price of the season refers io the period between Aug. 1. 2000 and Oec.,24. 2000. Regular prices arc offering prices and may not have resulted In actual sales 


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j^phuonEdi^ WWiam Brock— '733-0931 j ExL ^64 


Pa^^c A-6 


Friday, December 1, 2000 


The Timcs-Ncws 


11EDIT0RHI7 


I More visitors will 
'preserve Craters? 

“We had 10 destro}^ the village in order favor is that people don’t go out 
tosaveit." there,” Bonnivier said, adding that 

Remember that line from the more people are likely to go there now. 


Vietnam War? It was a sublime oxy- 
; moron, and war protesters ridiculed it 
; mercilessly. 


The sad truth is that whenever the 
government makes a big deal out of 
protecting something, people 


The Clinton administration has inevitably want to sec it. As Nielzsdie 
invoked similar logic to “prefect” the remarked, “One has watched life 
•‘unique lava flows and grasslands badly if one has not seen the hand 
•around the Craters of the Moon that, considerately, kills.” 

- National Monument. Last month. The expansion of Craters illustrates 
• President Clinton expanded the monu- a growing disconnect between conser-- 
; ment from its • ■ vative Westerners 

and environmen- 
tal liberals. Few 
people who live 
and work near 
Craters- have 
voiced any con- 
cern about the 
area’s future. But 


original 80 square 
miles to more 
than t.OOO square 
miles. 

Tlie idea was to 
save the area 
from the ravages 

V of human visita- _ 

;! lion. That seems a little odd, given environmental saviors - led by Interior 
; that the land around Craters was Secretary Bruce Babbitt - appear 
rarely visited before Clinton -shazam! 

’ - protected it. 

Now here’s the real irony. The novel- 


The mredty of a ffvath apfw/M 
Cniten of the . Moon Satmuil 
Moniwietir h hiw/ho hire more 
at nous vbitors. This is protecting it? 


intent on saving the intermountatn 
West from ignorant Westerners.- 
For more than. 75 years, Craters of 



•; ty of a greatly expanded Craters of the the Moon has been a quaint little 
■; Moon National Monument is bound to' national monurneni, tucked aw y in 
lure more curious visitors. They will the high desert of southern Idaho.' 
undoubtedly find their way into areas Suddenly Craters is a dozen times 
■; that had previously seen few, if any. larger, and more people than ever are 


Like Dracula, Gore could rise agaiii 


; people. 

The upshot will be more Ixiot prints 


bound to visit. 

Now conservationists propose the 


arid tire tracks. And more visitation same dubious salvation for the 
will protect Craters? Owyhee canyonlands. They want 

— ^A-recenHrimes-News-stoty' explored— Glintonto-confermonumcnrsratus-io- 

the emerging doubts of federal offi- protect the’ area from overuse. Yet 
cials and conservationists. The long- they say a monument would benefit 
lime Idaho director of The Nature Owyhee County by attracting more 
Conservancy. Guy Bonnivier, tourist dollars. 

; expressed misgivings about whai’s With friends like these working to 
; ahead for Craters, save the West, the West doesn’t need 

; “One of the greate.st things in its anyenemies. 

TheTiines-News 

Stephen - Pubtbtwr 

ClartiWatworth Marwglngedllof- MlkoSmlt Jldvortblnjdlfoetof' 




Tlib members of the editorial board and writers of editorials are Stephen Hartgen, 
William Brock, Clark Walworth, Steve Crump, Kevin Richer! and Dan Fields. 


Letters 


■ Treat livestock humanely 

On Monday, a hoaring before the 
cuumy commission was held in which 
Bill Cliisliulm and Mike Ihlcr presented 
; ii rc.solution on liehalf of many of us. The 
resohiiion concerned the quality-of-iife 
impact of large confined aninuil feeding 
" operations on all t»f us, Tliese two citi- 
zens desen e mtidi credit, 

At ailjoummeni, the commissioners 
' apparently agreed to take the proposals 
; in the re.solurion under advisement and 
• report back on tlieir conclusions, 
i I’erliaps the commi.ssioners should 
' consider another dimension of the 
;■ CAFO ctimroversy: While the effects on 
; humans of CAI'Os in terms of air pollu- 
- lion (odor, etc..) and surface-groundwa- 
, ter pollution are and should be the pri- 
rnary consideratioms, .should not a sec- 
tindary consideration be for the humane 
i treatment of the atiimal-s? Do we have 
an advocate-lawyer to represent their 
[; ituerest.s? Isli’t the unnatural, even 
cruel, treatment of the animals them- 
selves an impdriatii feature of this con- 
troversy? I refer to the traumatic con- 
, fitiement, forced feeding of calves. 

' ; denial of natural grazing instincts, room 
to roam, etc. Are-ihere no statutes or 
ordinances designed to control treat- 
!. ment of these animals? For food, we love 
milk and milk products, as well as the 
-^icitd-rtnimaHtselfrShouldn'nvcrthero- — 
j; fore, give the best treatment possible 
»i "’iiile thev are alive? 

H! V!> is 'h.ii humane treatment of 
^ animals will someday trump our greed 
for profits, etc. 

; To he fair, i)erliaps the commission 
. lias heretofore, on its own initiative, 

■ addressed ami undertook action in this 


area of g<wd hu.shan<lry which Is.oftcn 

overlooked or ignored. -- • 

JACK HARTLL Y 
Twin Fulls 

Early announcements spell voting 

If everything was perfect. I believe 
Bush would win both popular and elec- 
toral vote.s. 

I am partial, a lifdlong Republican, ■ 
hut I have tried my best to think this out 
and believe that if the early announce- 
ment had not occurred, Bush would liave 
won Florida hy a wider margin and 
would have gotten many more votes 
across the country. 

We went to vote mid-afteriiuon, but 
we u.sually vote late, and had I seen this 
announcement that Gore had won even 
• before we went to vole, we would not 
have voted a I was confident our .state 
and local elections would come out just 
about as they dii. without our vote.s. 

DAN PARK • 

Twin Falls 

Pay money to the right causes 

At long last, an editorial a.sking the 
public to pay more money. And coming 
from the self-professed watchdog of 

southern Idaho fis cal cons ervat ism. 

Are you applauding a school bond? Oh 

-norjust-some-greedy-attemprby 

Iniermountain Gas. 

Just for the sake of being funny, read 
the editorial and replace ImermOuniain 
Gas by one of these .school districts 
which you vilify daily. Wow, what a 
rationale. 

JKAN-JACQUESBOIIL 

Hailey 


D ort’t count A1 Gore out. As 
his primetime speech Mon- 
day night demonstrated, he’s 
a weak advocate for hJs own 
cause. But. fominaiely for 
him, he has an army of far more effective 
advocates silting atop the commanding 

— hei^icsof-poliiicsrlhe-media-and-the 

I.1W. 

Did you notice how Gore kept smiling 
at odd times during Ills six-flagsover' 
Wasliingion speech? He even seemed to 
chuckle outri^it when he said, “This t$ 
America. When votes ore cast, we count 
them.” ' . 

Wliat’s so funny about that? Lots. To 
Stan with, on Election Night, the net- 
works announced liiro as the winner, and 
tlien tlic loser, before the real ballots 
were tallied in Florida. But wliat’s funni- 
est of all is Gore’s promise that just one 
more count - under his terms, of course - 
will actually divine the'uuc vdll of 
Sunshine Staters when they traveled to 
the polls or mailed in their abseiiicc bal- 
lots weeks ago. Core needs a nveak: His 
sense of the ridiculousness of the whole 
process threatens to melt his rolwtic 
veneer, luiderinining the gravity of his 
pre.sentation. 

But. for all Ills defects. Gore lias three 
things going for lUm. 

First, the Democratic tradition of hard- 
ball politics. Democrats, always scorch- 
ing for a'”rolc for government," natural- 
ly take to politics; for many, if not most, 
party activists, government Is not only 
wliat tliey believe in, it’s hmv they make 
their living-s. 

Second, the media. Reporters arc not 
overly fond of Gore, but iliey arc even 
less fond of Republicans. Expect an end- 


James P. Pinkerton 


Got milk? You should have It 

Lisa Hobson posed a question on Nov. 
8 about the suitability of milk for 
human consumption. 

The simple ansivcr is that milk is a 
safe and excellent source of many nutri- 
ents. The protein found in milk is of 
superb (juallty for the body's needs. 
Additionally, certain milk proteins may 
r'tmbat cancer and tlie AIDS virus. 

cent evidence is showing quite clear- 
ly that milk fat also possesses bctiefidal 
factors. Dairy products are the major 
source of conjugated linolcic add, a 
fatty add that has been shown unequiv- 
ocally to inhibit cancer in laboratory 
animals. Further, research from Finland 
has demonstrated a 50 percent reduc- 
-tion in.rislcof.breast canccrin women 
who consumed three glasses of whole 


mflkiniay, comp.ired to those that con- 
sumed one glass of milk a day. 

Milk is the best source for another 
important nutrient, calcium. Improved 
hone strength, reduced iilood pressure 
and a lower risk of colon cancer are all 
well-establishedbe'nefiis of caldum. 
One needs to consume four cups of milk 
to meet current recommendations for 


less stream of articles and books on GOP 
“thuggery" in Florida, but don't expect 
many reports on the rich history of vote 

-fraudinDemocratic-Miami-Daderfor 

example, and not much coverage of some 
GI in a camp in Bosnia or Okinawa whose 
vote was rejected 

Third, the courts. You can't see how a 
judge or two could pve the election to 
Gore? Maybe you didn’t notice how 
judges in the past conjured up school - 
busing or federally funded pornographic 
“art.” 

Judge N. Sanders Sauls’ rejection of 
the Gore campaign’s request to start 
recounting about 13,000 disputed ballots 
right away -was seen as a defeat for the 
vice presdent But the mere fact that 
Sauls ordered tho» ballots trucked to 
Tallahassee gives them a special signifi- 
cance, separate and distinct from the 
other 6 milJion’balJots cast. 

Somehow, someway, tiicy will eventu- 
ally be “counted” for Gore. And, of 
course, zillions of other lawsuits arc 
pending, swirling over the final result 
like chads waiting to be eaten. 

Ah, but so what, you say, if the certifi- 
cation of the state for Bush ultimately . 
stands? You mean the certification by 
Katiicrine Harris, that “partisan"? Never 
minding the fact everyone in Florida pol- 
itics is a partisan, Democrats will claim 
(hnt anything ^he does is reversible - in 
the courts, in die Electoral College and 
in Congress. 

Whoa, you say. The courts, maybe. But 
the Electoral College? Congress? If Bush 

-Letters- 


calcium intake (approximately 1,200 
milligrams per day). Of course, you ' 
could get your caldum by eating two 
pounds of cooked spinach or nearly six , 
pounds of broccoli. Orange juice is 
allowed to list reduced blood pressure 
as a health benefit due to the presence' 
of potassium. Milk contains nearly 30 
percent more potassium than orange 
juice. 

No reputable sdentist believes con- 
sumption of milk within a normal diet to 
be an adverse risk for human health. It 
is difficult to imagine how adverse 
effects of milk could be true jf the docu- 
mented benefits of the nutrients within 
milk can prevent cancer, improve bone 
status and reduce blood pressure. True, 
..milk docs contain I ormones.-But these - - 
hormones exist in similar amounts ii 


holds on to Florida, he has 271 eleaof^ 
votes out of 538. . 

Which is to say, if the Core-iors - dwig 
lurid talcs of voter abuse and brandish- 
ing any other kind of cajolery, can “tup” 
three Bush electors - they win. Longtime 
Democratic op^tive Bob B^el say&lie 
-is trying to do just that. Gore has said Ite - 
would not accept the votes of “foithle^ 
cl^ors," but such a statement has, to, 
coin a phrase, no controlling legal autR'or* 
ity. 

Even if all the electors stay intact fo'i' 
Bush, they face another hurdle. Both 


6, can join and reject eleaors from a ' 

. given state. The new Senate will be sut 
50-50 between the parties. The tic-brcl^* 
er, of course, is the president of the .' 
Senate and, until Jan. 20, that’s Gone.; . 

As for the new House, it vyill effeedv^ 
ly be 221 Republicans and 214 ‘ - 

Democrats. Gore & Co. apparently figure 
^Kit, by mustering on their politic, '' 
racclia, and legal mu^e, they might ptiel 
' away four GOPers. Indeed, Repi Connjb 
Morelia, R-Md., whose suburban 
Washington district went heavily for 
Gore, has indicated that she would voije 
vnth the Democrats in any such show- 

/ down. . ■ 

So, like Arnold. Schwarzenegger in (tic 


movie “Terminator,” Gore k«ps grini 
ing forward. You may not like him, bm 
you have to take him seriously. Yes, that 


bad robot in the movie was ultimntdy 
defeated, but he would have won i£ he*' 
could have demanded a recount every], 
time he was killed. 

James P. Pinkerton is a Ncivsday colum- 
nist. , 


mllinrom beet cows as well as in human 
milk. Further, these hormones have no 
biological effects on humans other than 
serving as a Source of protein. 

Finally, the dairy industry strives for 
a safe product. Every tanker of milk is 
tested for antibiotics before it is accept- 
ed by the processor. If a load of milk Is • 
contaminated, then that milk is 


removed from di6 human food chain. , | 
Dairy products can be a part of a 
healthy human diet. They provide nutd- 
ems that humans rcquirc. Altemative-i 
sources for these nutrients may exist, h 
H owever, dairy products are the best 
sources. As parents of three children, 
we have complete confidence in the 
safety and healtlifulness of dairy, prod- , 
ucts. ' [ 

MARK A. MCGUIRE, Phi). I 

MICHELLE MCGUIRE, Ph.D. ! 

(Editor’s note: The McGuires arcstudft 
in^ canjugalcd linolcic add. Marie 'I 

McGuire is an assistant professor in the' |, 
animal and veterinary sdcnce department 
at the University of Idaho and Michelle 
McGuire is an assistant professor in the 
..foodsdimccand human nutrition depart^ 
ment at Washington State University.) 


; ' Write tO.lBy 

T i/w R/mjVifews.v^coiTioafet^ I 

reodors on subjects of public Interest . 
Letters may bo brought to. our IVvln foils 1 
or Burley office; mailed to P.O. Sox S48, 

Twin Falls. 10 83303; faxed to (208) 73i . 
5538; or emailed V>tdnewsOm}6fon.ne€ 








Opinion 


^Ee electio n, like ali ci oud^^^^ a silver lining 


Friday, Owerator 1. 2000 TbnwMawt, Tain Fab, hW« A-7 


Stay on top of your Investments 
■ with the Money pages. 


^ 0 matter what the 
— outcomeef this eleo " ~ ' 

I ^^1 don, it has been one 
l—^l of the mo s t uhic ual~ — 
^ and important eve- 
nts in American peacetime histo- 
ry. We ought to remind ourselves ' 
of that beausc when you’re in 
the middle of something impor- . 
f^t, you don't rememt^ how • 
important it is. Those of us who 
live long enough are going to be \ 

f ' "ading about this in history f 

oka. * V 

It's a mess, but ther^ are some . v 
jtbod things about this election. - s 


— Andy— 
Rooney 


I ^e virtue of our democracy is 

I Wat the leadership is always in 

I ^nibt Doubt about who our next 

I J^der will be is what makes our 

democracy both different and . 

I jitter than a monarchy or a die- 

fatorship. Hitler didn’t have to 
gait for the last votes to come in 
mm the hinterlands before he 
[frew he was going to rule 
)(|ermany.' 

2 History is goi^ to take note of 
^is year’s election because there 
m so many interesting things 
8bout in 

Here we have the son of a for- 
frer President running against 
^e current Vice President, who 
Q the son of an important for- 

g cr senator himself. Neither of 
ese tvrai mediocre candidates 
||ouId have attracted our atten* 
if they hadn’t been the ^ns 
gf men who did. 

!► The votes have been accepted 
in 49 of our 50 states and are ■ 

L- being contested in one. Of the 
six miUion votes cast in Florida, 

^e winner is claiming a majori- 
ty of something like 500. The 
-governor of Florida is the broth- 
■er of one of the candidates. That 
'Candidate is governor of another 
^te, Texas. 

Could you make this stuff up? 
r Fewer than half of all 
'Americans eligible to vote'bolh- 
• ,'^.ered to. We don't know whether 
_ biey were too dumb or just busy. 
— The lastofridai count of all the~ — 
votes in thp country showed that 
^ Gore, the apparent loser, got 
' iibout 328,000 more votes than < 
the apparent winner, Bush. 

What allows a loser to win is 
the Electoral College. The 
' Electoral College was meant to 
, keep states like California and 
New ‘Voric from overpowering 
'the desires of the people in small 
states like Wyoming and New 
Hampshire giving each state 
representation in proportion to 
its population - but not exactly. 

' A state has as many electors as it 
. has representatives iii Congress, 
but no matter how big a state 
^ets, it has only one elector for 
each of its two senators.' 

; The candidates are still talking 
about "public opinion,” but the ' 
public doesn’t have a collective 
Opinion. If it did, there's no way 
"&yote''could express it The pub- 
lic has a million unclear opinions 
. about a million different things. ■ 
We go into a voting booth, pull 
a lever, mark a piece of paper or 
otherwise indicate a preference. 

No lever of mark on paper could 
express all the opinions every 
l^neofushas. 

' The kind of "public opinion” 
they keep talking about doesn't 
exist;That's what political par- 
ties are for. They put each of our 
'opinions in a pot boil them down 
and moke them into cither 
Democratic or Republican "poli- 
cy.” We go olong with them, 

' «ven though neither party ever 
- representsouroplnionsp^ect- 

ly. 


Want to 
know the 
" score? Read 
,The Times-News 
sports pages 


It’s been said - 1 said itTor one 
- that voters were not going to 
vote somuch on the views held 
by the two candidates bur on 
which one they liked best. That’s 
why AI Gore lost the big lead he 
started with. People got to like 
him less and less as he talked . 


more and more. 

At the enti,'evm thc~[ti(»t 
_ ar dent supp orters of l»th candl- 
da'tes were admitting that we 
didn’t have an outstanding candi- 
date. 

As long as we’re so evenly 
. divided tetween two poor candi- 
- dates, it’s lucky that our elec* . 
dons eliminate differences 
. between the two parties rather 
than emphasizing them. 

The candidates, each trying to 
-attraa the most voters, come 
toward each other rather than 
away from each other. 

We're going to be OK.- 


_ 60 Minutes commentator Andu 
Rodney is a aiuirinist with ■ 
Tribune Media Services. 

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Critically III; New 
York ho^ital admits 
..eldest son of Ernest 
Hemingw^ 


ArouSjd 

THE VALLEY 

Sheriff says escapee 
‘dropped out of si^’ 

JEROME - Law enforcement 
Thursday bad no%ew leads on a 
man warned in connection with an 
fepe last week from the Jerome 
Coun^JaiL 

•BlMonty Ray Boston, 23, is still on 
the loose. Two 
other inmates 
wanted in con- . 
necdon with the 
escape turned 
themselves in 
last week. 




Lawffl%efe dislike miriinisi; restrictions 

By Mefian SctlI^ . - ^ ^ 


By Mefan Scully 

Statei Newa Service 

WASHINGTON - New mining 
reguladons, set to go into effect 
in January, have drawn the ire of 
Western lawmakers. 

They fear the rules will pose a 
naddnal security risk and sipiifi- 
cantly affect the economy of 
Western states, indudihg Idaho. 

The regulations on hard rode 
raining, released last week by the 
Bureau of Land Management, 
are the first revisions to the 
agency’s mineral rules in 20 
years. 

The BLM has hailed the regula* 


nons as necessary to protect pub- 
- Uc health and the environment, 
and an effective measure to pre- 
vent further degradation of pub- 
lic land from hard rock min^ 
But Western lawmakers, who 
urged the administration to 
include them in any decisions 
regjmding the future of the min- 
ing indusuy, are vowing to com- 
bat the regulations with legisla- 
_tion designed to protect miners.- 
Sen. Lany Craig, R-Idaho, “has 
had the door open to the adminis- 
tration to sit down and rewrite 
mining law,” said Craig 
spokesman Will Hart. .“The 
.administration has dedded not to 


lators say more mines will fail. 

Rep. Jim Gibbons, R-Nev., esti- 
mates his state stands to lose at 
least 3,200 jobs and face a $351 
million economic shortfall 
because of the new regulations. 


(consult with Congress), but 
changed mining law through 
rules and regulations.” 

'The Western Governors’ 

Association, chaired by Idaho 
Gov. Dirk Kempthome, and sev- 
eral Western congressmen have 
expressed their concerns, and 
have urged the administration to 
weaken the restrictions. 

Those rules could harm an 
already struggling industry that 
is vital to the West. Gold prices 
have dropped, and mines across 
the Rod^ Mountain region are 

scrugglmg to remain open, oppo- ivorld metals prices, he said. 

. Bui Western lawmakers are 
With tourer reguJanons, legis- still l^•ary about any new regula- 


tions, including rules being draft- 
ed by the U.S. Forest Service. 

The BLM rules threaten 
national security, since they 
cover minerals used for military 
hardware, arid threaten local 


■inntvipAL tL- »— ver said Thurs- 
«hrtyRi,B«ton da/aftemoon of 

Boston. There has been absolute- 
lyzero.” 

Boston might have been, and 
mi^t still be, in the Boise area. 
Police have checked two cars 
Boston might have driven. 

The Jerome County Sheriff’s 
Department is distributing fliers of 
Boston in the Magic Valley, and is 
getting him listed in America’s 
Most Wanted, Weaver said. 

Boston is 5 feet, 11 inches tall 
and weighs 200 pounds. He has 
black hair and brown eyes and a 
tattoo across his chest that says, 
^Confessing a Feeling.” He is con- 
lidered extremely dangerous, 
g JL'Anybody with information about 
Boston can call 324-8845 during 
business hours or 735-1911. 

TF clinic might decide 
on a buyer next week 

■TWIN tAIXS - The Twin Falls , 
Clinic.& Hospital might decide 
next week on a buyer. • 

Clinic doctors will meet'next 
wedk wi A the two hospito^ see^- , . 

“Ttf^^^'old h^v8 all'Sie iiifor- 
. matioii needed,” said clinic attdr^ 
ney;.JOiJjd;r Stamper of Spokane, 


Wash: Wphyii'i!, 

. chow on it is up them, Thfe^^'-V 
gone on long 
healthy to mako a 
At their last meeting, clinic doc- 
tors made a list of questions about 
potentiol, relationships with the 
hospitals, and also wanted to talk 
again with hospital ofRdals. 

The hospitals got the questions 
Thursday, and^should.providc - 
- answers by next week, Stamper 
said. 

Stamper said he wilkmect with 
^ doctors next week, along with ' 
uhdals from both hospitals in sep- 
qrate meetings. No dates have 
T)een set yet. 

• Magic Valley Regional Medical 
Center and Saint Alphonstis 
Regional Medical Center in Boise 
• are both seeking the hospital. 
Their proposals are confidential. 

ONV guideline release 


A festive occasion 


The BLM says the rules willv ~ •’Anomies.’ 

“Mining operacions-provide 
All current actiwaw wUl con- . thousands of high-paying jobs in 
^ predominantly ^ Sof the 

spokeaman. “The e;osMg opera- West, and thev provide impor- 
tioraaregranthathered.” ,a„, revenue to the states," 

. ^anomic failiire of mines Kempthorrte wrote in a recent 
has UttJe to do with federal regu- . letter to Defense Secretary 
lations and more to do with William Cohen. "The mining 
industry also continues to play 
an important role in the hation's 
economy and security.” 



List names j 

influential 

organizations 


TheJTme*-Newt 


oniDlPUR/TlaTk 


TWIN Ralls - The release of 
new guidelines .for governing 
motorizeti recreation on public 
lands has been delayed n g ’ni p 
"the , Bureau of Land 
Manageihenc had expected to 
release 'the rules '-In .ear^. 
November, and in' mid-Noveniber 

I annoi^nced.chat 
the guidelines 
would he released 
Thursday., ' 

• Wlththat dead- 
line m issed, the new guidelines are 
expected- today or Monday, BLM 
^okesman Barry Rose said 
Thursday. 

BLM officials Intend the plan to I 
-recognize-ihe-interests-of off-high- — I 
way user groups and still protect ' 
epvironfflentaily sensitive public 


Festival to feature original trees 


ids. 


f t;j.'he plan will be available initial- 
y on the BLM’s Internet site. 
Printed copies will then be avail- 
able at state and field offices. In 
..the Magic Valley, BLM offices are 
in Burley,' Twin Falls and 
Shoshone. 

The plan will be opon for public 
commentihrough Jan. 19, 2001. 

World AIDS Day 
procession fo begin 

TWIN jFAI^LS’- The American* 
-Red Cross, the College of Southern 
Idaho and the South Central Idaho 
AIDS Coalition will hold a candle* 

, light pro^slon for'World ' 
, Day Bt'SllS p.m. thlsSvening at 
Q^Parlt... 

■' The event will feature local 
singerisongwriter Suzanne Jusst 
nationally known speaker 

fl^K efreshments will be serv^. - 

Compiled fro m t taff reporb 


. By Karen Bossick 

Tlmet-Newa correspondent 

HAILEY - Blame it on The 
Grinch. ' 

The fuzzy green holiday spoil- 
sport has Hailey’s Festival of 
Trees in a dither this year. Not 
only has he taken captive one 
tree but he’s turned another 
completely upside down. 

He’sjrjing to steal it, just as ' 
he trying to 4ieal Christmas at • 
movie theaters across the 
nation. Patti Freestone . 

-had the Id^a.. Her husband Mike , 
'and daughtw Erica are helping 
her carry iit.out, figuring out 
how to stand a six-foot artificial 
Christmas tree on the wrong 
end and mount the presents bn 
top - the original underside of 
the tree. 

It’s complicated. 


The Feattval ol Trees will be held from 

noon to 9 p.m. today. 10 a.m. to 9 . 
p:m: Saturday and 11 a.ni.'to 3 p.m. 
Sunday at the Natlorial Guard Armory 
In Hailey. 

Admlaalon la $3 for adults and $2 for 
children with family rates Dvallobio. 

A ChIldren'a'Ko|Udey Worxlettand arvd 
Toddy Beor Tea wlfl'be introduced to 
the FesUval of Trees on Saturday. 

The wonderland will feature a fb|1 day 
of children's activities, such as cook- 
iedecorating and crafts, luiso.vllji 
featUra Eiorylellirig at 10 a.m.. learrv 


Want to know more? 


log to Sign *$11001 Night* at 11 a.m., 
a mi niat ure horso at 12:15.p.m., 
Santa at i p.m., Tho Amating Juggler 
at 2 p.m. and The Birthday Box at 3 
p.m. 

Moma and daughter* In grades kinder- 
garten through sixth, ore invited to the 
tea from 2 to 3:30 p.m. It will Include 
entertainment, prlres. a fashion sfiow 
and cookies. The cost Is S5 for adults 
and S3 (or daughters (SIO for a Mom 
with two daughters and S12 (or a 
Mom with three children), For roserva- 
lions, call 786-3468. 


And it took the Freestone 
family 10 hours to figure out all 
details. But, you can be sure 
it’ll be a show-stopper at the 
fourth annual Festival ,of Trees, 
which begins today and runs 
through Suiiday at the Hailey 


Armory. T festival will 

feature 35 trees jcorated in 
ways you can only dream about, 
as well as entertainment by a 
hand bell choir, ballet dancers 
and even a group from St. 
Charles Catholic Church singing 


Christmas carols in Spanish. 

On Saturday the armory will 
be transformed into a 
Children's Holiday Wonderland 
with a host of activities includ- 
ing emertainment by Peter the 
- Paper Hanger and The Amazing 
Juggler and a Teddy Bear tea 
for Moms and their daughters. 

Dozens of elves worked day 
and night Wednesday and 
Thursday transforming trees of 
all different shapes and sizes 
into works of art. 

Irish Smith worked a little 
green thumb magic, transform- 
ing one tree into “Roseanna in 
the Highest” with the help of 
velvet antique roses. 

Francq? Kern, merchandise 
buyer ^or Paul’s Market, cov- 
ered a tree with all sorts of 

Please see FESTIVAL, Page 83 


BOISE - Several organizationir— 
based in the Magic Valley, or ' 
with operations in the region, . 
have made a list ranking the 
state’s 100 most influential non- 
government organizations. 

The list was compiled bv 
Ridenbaugh Press publisher 
Randy Stapilus, with advice from 
Idaho economists and others 
familiar with Idaho business and 
economics. 

“This is ah entirely subjective 
list,” Stapilus. a longtime Idaho 
journalist and political observer. , 
said in a news release. 
“Contributors were encouraged 
to consider a variety of criteria, 
but they ranked the busini.-ss 
according to their own evalua- 
tions within each category,” ' 
Criteria used to compile the 
list included the number of 
employees, the type of organiza- 
tion, involvement in Idaho public 
affairs and an estimate of how 
different Idaho would be if the 
business or organization depart- 
ed. 

;For ihe'first time, church orga- 
nizations were included on the 
list. 

The top 10 includes: 

• 1. Micron Technology, noi 
directly involved in the Magic 
Valley. 

• '2."Church' of Jesus .Cbrisrof 
Latter Day Saints,'a Utah-based 
church which counts 25 percent 
of Idaho residents as mambers— . . . 

• 3. Bechtel BWXT Idaho, 
LLC, which has no operations in 
the Magic Valley, but contributes 
a large amount of money to eco- 
nomic development actirities. 

• 4. Albertson's Food & Drug, 
the Boisc-basc grocery chain, 
with several locations in the 
MagicValley, and one of the two 
or three largest grinery store 
companies in the world. 

• 5. J.R. Simplot Co., which 
operates a potato processing 
plant in Heyburn and operates 
the state’s largest cattle operai 
tion. 

• 6. Idaho Power, which has 
operations, including a string of 
hydropower dom.s. thrmiglioiit 
southern Idaho. 

• 1,0. Roman Catholic Church 
(Boise Diocese), the second 
largest church in Idaho. 

Other organizations with Magic- 
Valley ties include; 

Please see LIST, Page 93 


I Environmental lernire 


to focus on global issues 


Tinwt^ew* miter 

ACEQUIA - With the future 
of Acequia Elementary School 
uncertain, the Minidoka School 
Board has called a special meet- 
• ing on Monday at ihe school. 

At a meetizig Wednesday with 
Kent Krohn, an architect with 
Le'atham, Krohh, and Van Ocker 
Architects of Boise, the school 
board examined a preliminary 
plan in which Acequia would 
-receive.$S15,000-out-of-ihe-pro- — -I 
posed $16,4 million facility 
improvement plan. 

Of the money-allotted for 
Acequia, $215,000 was ear- 
marked tor site work, renova- 
tion and fire alarm installation. 

The remaining 5300,000 would 
go toward a handicapped ramp 
at ‘the gynmasium and ro Install 
either new handicapped-accessi- 
ble, bathrooms or a ramp to the 
existing bathrooms. i . 

Curr^Uy, the area to the \4^t 
. of vthe gymnasium, which will be 



BMmM/Twn.iiiii.1 


If the Minidoka County School Board {uttei a plant facility layy In February, 
'Acequia ElamariUry School la ilatad to receive about $600,000. A public ’ 
meeting will be held Monday at tha achool to hear what the community liaa 
to lay about the faclllt) plan. 

walled off, provides handi-^ the bathroom fodlities 
copped aross to th,. gym and tt> Plea* sea PUn: Page.B3 


By Pat Murphy 

Tlme*-Naw» correapondent 

SUN VALLEY - Speakers at" 
a local lecture series Saturday 
will offer a global view of envi- 
ronmental issues. 

Th? second annual Frank 
Church lecture series, running 
-fr4>m-9;30-OTmT-to-4-i30-pTmT- 
Snturday nt the Elkhom Resort, 
will expand to encompass glob- 
al environmental problems and 
que.stions. The program is titled 
“Globalization and the 
Environment: Whai are the 
Tradeoffs?” 

Admission is free. 

* Leading the lineup of speak- 
ers is Timothy Wirth. former 
congressman and U.S. senator 
from Colorado, who now heads 
the United Nations Foundation. • 
The foundation - created with a* 


$1 billion donation from broad- 
cast mogul Ted Turner aims. to 
assist United Nations programs 
addressing women’s issue.s, pop- 
ulation, children's health, the 
environment and human rights. 

Wirth will speak on the need 
for a combined international 
assault to solve global prob- . 

— lems;^ 

Making a return appearance 
is Roderick Nosh, an author and 
professor emeritus of history 
and environmental studies at 
•the University of California at 
Santa Barbara. 

Attendees at the conference 
will have the opportunitv to 
have liinch with Wirth and 
Nash in small groups, as well as 
several other speakers, to dis- 
cuss environmental problems 
and solutions. 

Please see LECTURE. Page 83 




TltM»M«w»,TiitnPai>*,Uiiie Friday, Otctoftw 1,2000 

Magic ValleyAVest 


■Death NOTICES- 


_ JPpKANE, 

-Dale-Wixom, -74, -formerly "oC 
Burley, died Nov. 25, 2000, in 
Spokane, Wash. 


James Trogita 

JEROME - James Troglia of 


Burley, passed^wdy^V<f3nS^j^' 
zNov^29,-2000,-at-ihe^Baaie' 
Mountain General Hospital and 


Graveside services will'be held Jerome pased away Thursday Aii^gements arep^dlng and 
11 a.m. Monday, Dec. 4, 2000, Nov. 30 at the University of Mni.'"' 


,. — . , — University 

at the Riverside Cemetery, in Washington Medical Center. 
Heybum, Idiiho.. - Arrangements are pending and 

Arrangement.s are under the will be announc/>d a 
direction of Hansen Mortuary 

iiorkyCimpoi. .Helen E. Hill 

BATTLE MOUNTAIN, Nev. - 


Mortuary in Burley.- 

Lawrence Sill 


Helen E. Hill, 


CASTLEFORD - Lawrence ^ 
passed away Thursday, Nov. 30, 
2000 in Yuma, Ariz. • 

ArrangemeritspendingFanher' 
81, of Battle FuneralChnpelofBuhl. 


-Services 


atella Kingston 

. TWIN FALLS - Stella Kingston 
of Twin Falls passed away 
Thursday, Nov. 30, 2000, at her 
home in Twin Falls. 

-dHrciritt^^ Nice^ Drusillo WaraerLambert of 

Valley Funeral Home of Twin w*r***^^^’ p.m. today at DeeJo, funeral at 11 a'jn. today at' 
Falls • . ' McLaughlin Twm Cities Funeral the Declo Stake Center of The 

Home, 140S John Sims Parkway Church of Jesus Christ of Latter- 
in Niceville, Fla. Mass of day Saints, 213 W. Main St. in 
Christian Burial at 2 p.m. ' 

Saturday at the Holy Name of 


^Catherine E. 
^Bengoechea 

TWIN FALLS^ Catherine E. 
Bcngocchca, 8b^f Twin Falls 
died Thursday, Nov. 30, 2000, at 
Bridgetiew Retirement Estates. 

Funeral arrangements are 
pending and will be announced 
by Reynolds Funeral Chapel of 
Twin Fails. 


Dedo. 

, - Friends and family may call 

Jesus Church, 1200 Valparaiso from 10-10;45 a.m. today at the 


Blvd. in Niceville. 

Robert Dcusy of Gooding, 
memorial services at 10:30 a.m. 
today at Demaray' 

Chapel. 


stake centci (Ramussen Funeral 
Home). 


Willium “Blir 

Hagerman, services at 11 a. .... 
today at die Hagerman Christian 
Sterling . 

[-alls died Friends and'family may tall 

Thursday, Nov. 30, 2000, at Magic ffotn 10 a.m. until the time of ser- 


Sterling Vaughn 

.TWIN FALLS. 

■VailgTfrt,-5l,' dfl’win Falls died 
Thursday, Nov. 30, 2000, at Magi 
Valley Regional Medical Center. 

Funeral arrangements are (Demway’s Gooding Chapel), 
pending and will be announced 
by Reynolds Funeral Chapel of 
Twill Falls. 


Carman Colleen Frazier Davis 
Gooding of Jerome, celebration and 
memorial service at 11:30 a.m. 
'' Saturday at the Evangelical Free 

M. Nix of Church, 821 E. Ave. H in Jerome 
(Hove-Roberlson Funeral 
Home). 


Phyllis J; Lindsay of.Burley, 

services at 11 a.m. Saturday at 

vices today at .the center the Burley LDS 2nd, 4th, and 
.. Ward Chapel, 515 E. 16th 

St. 

Marlene Scars of Hansen, cele- Friends may call at the Payne 
braiion of life from 2-5 p.m. Mortuary in Burley from 6-8 p m 
Saturday at her home at 2492 today and from 10-10:45 a.m.'at 
Rock Creek Rd.. in Hansen the church Saturday. 


William McGinnis 

SHOSHONE - William * Magic Valley Funeral 

McGinni.s, 79, of Shoshone died 
Thursday, Nov. 30, 2000, at Ma^c 
Valley RegionalMedicai Center. 


Eleanor Elizabeth' Mills of 
Twin Falls, service at 1 p.r 


Dorothy Jean Shark of Buhl, 
services at 11 a.m. Monday atthe* 
Buhl First Christian Church. 


Funvral arrangemcnls arc ‘ w" from 4-6 p.m. 

pcodins and will be announced - 


Chapel in Twin Falls. 


. at Farmer Funeral 
Chapel in Buhl. 


Hospitals 


MAGIC VALLEY REGIONAL 
MEDICAL CENTER 

Some names arc omitted at the patient's re<]ucst 
Admitted 

Bonita M. Crivits of Jerome, Beetle Kraus of 
Kimberly, Leanne Marie Reel of Twin FaUs. 
Dismissed ' 

Billie Jo Bridwell of Twin Falls, Ardell Dayley of 


Burley, Robin Grindstaff of Twin Falls, Velma 
Olive Thompson of Twin Falls 

MINIDOKA MEMORI^ HOSPITAL 
Some names arc omitted at the paeiem’s request 

Admitted 

Irene Rolfe of Rupert, Edith Wr|Pi of Burley • 


Obituaries 


InfonnaHon. coH 73«93t Ext. 278, between 2 p.m. end S p.m. Monday throu^'Srtuntay. 
Deadline Is 4.30 p.m. lor next-day publication. Death notice* are a tree eervlco and can be placed until 5 p.m. every 


'1\VIN Fau.s 


Whilo Mofiuary Chapel, wnh (Poof) Craig. Mabie Taylor, and 
Bishop. Moivin vanNoy conduci- Ooroihy Nell Kieninknochi and 
mg hiermeni will lollow in me lour tiromers Frank.' Cecil mhn 
Twin Falls Cemeiery, ana Wallace Gnnsicd. 

A vigil service will be held 
Friday. Dec. 1. 2000. at 6 pm ai 
. Patke.s Magic valley Funeral 
Home at 255i Kimberly Rd.. Twin 
Falls Mass ol Christian Burial will 
be held Saiurday. Dec. 2. 2000. at 
ti a m 31 Si Edward's the 
Confessor Catholic Church in Twin 
Falls, burial will follow ai ih$ twin 
Falfs Cemclery 

AHa-Mae-Baty- 

Ada Mae Baiy. 83. ol Twin Fails, 
long lime Buhl resident, died 
Wednesday, Nov 29. 2000. at her 
home in Alterra Wynwood of Tv/m 
Falls. 

She was bom May 6. 1917 in 
Logan. III., ihe daughter of Elm'er 
and Marie Gough Laiham She 
aiiendod schools in Kimberly, 
where she graduated m 1935 The 
next year she married John Baly 
y fiup«il£jdabo.«.thw mad»tl 
i5ii Viiysf^r^ 

, Texas'dn'npril 

Ha 2 eilon and- Buhl Elna married ’90T, (o the parenis ol wiih^iiirinp 
RussGlILoweonAbg 22, ig4l.,„ M.rancia and John Harrison Sni 2?,,? 

Murlaugh, and. then inarnacje was Grinsied The lamily moved lo • ana momK,„ .k o b. 

laicv solemnized in me Idano Falls 'clnMp m I918.-when she was MeihoJs? CtS 

LDS Temple. She and Russell eleven In 1925, she married 

lived Ihfoughoul Ihe Magic Valley William C Malberg and ihey lived the Dniifno orc^ nriQ 

until he died on March 8.- 1996 1-a PiiSh. Wash., Spirit Lake, 

Lowo was a rnembo^ol ihe ^o'sc. Id lo^soveral years Then She is sufuivaci hv iwn dmig h 



Elna 0. Lowe 

Elna 0 Lowe. 79, ol Twin Falls, 
died Wednesday, Nov, 29, 2000. 
al^ SunBfic^ge Care 

View, Idaho, iho daughier ol caJses'^t''ihe age ol 93, Nov 
Johnson ^.9u2QQ0, 


-UDS-ehureh-where-sh'c"tatifjK, ... 

g Visiting whon they moved to Richmond, 


— feturned-iu=T^irt-p^il5-:QntiPt9il0:- 


.tors, Jean Moyor ol Hot Springs 

Toachor'. ana\varalso”j mn'rnbd! ■ Cain whoro-she' iorhed'is'"r Shf'wash 

She welder and her hesband worKed TorriaS Ce^TSlX 


Ol ifie Syniiga Club m Burley She 


enjoyed all lypus ol cralls. mciud- a ship litter at Ihe Kaiser Ship w„nriu Pa«Q«« V.i ^ 
mg ernbroinory. ceramics, making Yerd In 1 946. Ihey relumed 10 N M AmrSra oVl! 133 K 
porcelain doHs. doing boadwork. Twin Falls and opened the M & Y a.i. ’and^wo 
but the love 01 her ine-'was spend- E'ecinc appliance store, Bblh 5 Jan Sasse^ 

■ ina .i‘mo Sill .enjoyed hunling. Trav^s-Hokn " ''^F'-aughlin. and 

^ler gfartefTaT^'^a^i’H’nsnffiijSafTffnr^ntr^^ 

grandchildren whom she adored Staunch Holy Roman Caiholicl JJl nrBceSJS .n dS® i?™ 
She IS survived by lour children, they both wore involved m many orothor Charles l atham^ 

Denice (Harry) Meyer ol Blacklooi, and various religious activities ° tLq ' «,nro«c 

Idaho, Russell (Caryn) Lowe ol Evelyn is survived by (wo sons.. (Hgif nnoredaiion m u?n 
Boise. Idaho, Ralph E lowo ol Bob Malberg (Dadene) Burley, i|a Ker a wh^ 
Ev^l!lS.J_AlidhaeLUeh)J^ l^ o , Bill J f.... (Ka^J,_Twin Fails: 12 S ip f jmill fo^ ?hn^Movin^ 
ol Cedar City. Utah; 12 grandchih gr^dchildren. la groat-grandc^itT^nd ifiBnd^ in lo 
dren rune groal-grandchildren. bten and throe great-groai-grand- fhiea Ss mors ^ 
one brother, George Murphy ol children ** • mreo years mere. • 

Kirnberty, Idaho and i„o sislers. E.Blyn is Ihe Iasi dl he, Qrtnsted win b? ObhduS°'l0 aS’' 
Mae Brog ol Kimberly and Golda brothers and sisters, Eugene Saturday Dec 2 2000. at Sunsai 
K Palls IS Ihe last ol - Memonal Park wlthRev^^^^^ ' 

In addition to her husband and' the aunts and uncloS On Ihe '• 


Shby dSe” son? C brSmt's'! "sSe°'°wlf“p.eced„d 1 „ death by ' 

. Fun„,a'rs3,„ce3 Id, Elna 0 SSia^nd^Saeg'fife, ‘Sil'’“d,a''„T CinTe's'” c'e°„,o,“ ®c/a wSlf; 
Lowe,_will^be 30 children; _slxjsisj^B_rs_, Addy Turley, Mortuary, Box 845. Twin Falls, ID 


. Saiurday, Dec 2. 2000, at Grace Miichelt, Edith Bush, Berihp 83303-0845 


Elkq begins superintendent search 


Tlmewfewt comtponadnt 


ELKO, Nev. - Elko School 
District Superintendent 'Muda 
Bandera Is retiring' from the top 
post in June and the School 
Board is now searching for her 
replacement. • 

.An ad hoc search committee 
made up of school offldals and 
community leaders will take on 
the challenge of replacing 
Bandera, a formerdeputy super- 
intendent with the Nevada 
Department of Education. 

As the state, aeputy superin- 
tendent, Bandera super, vised 


sppdal education, elementary Billings. She holds-’a bachfif 
and secondary education and _d£greeJanuii^amla‘?--^ 

research-andtesilng,--raangged--degiec in edacatidhta-i^ 
the budget and acted.^j the leg- * 


islative liaison. 

. Bandera, ^ cam/to Elko as a 
director of instruAlon in 1992. 
She said.she decided to leave 
the-state offico/because ‘^they_ 
are too far removed"' from the 
classroom teaching process. ! ■ 

“I wanted to be *rhete I could 
see where the needs came 
. from,'’-BandenL said in on inter- 
view in August 1992. 

Bandera became the superin- 
tendent in 1994, replacing retir- 
ing Superintendent Paul 


tratioil from the University. of 
Nevada,Reno. ' ' . ! 

Bandera makes $91,612 annu- 
ally and has declined raises oker ' 
■ theyearsi.'.^' •, - . '■■j- 

Her career in' ediicatiori was 
recognized e'arller.this y^ar 
. when she was named Nevida> 
<Superintendent-of the Yearlby 
the Nevada Association-] of 
SchoolAdministrators. ' 

' TVmcs-Neids cofTC^ndenll C, 
Andre Begin can be reached in 
. Elko, Nev. at 77S-777^44% 


Prairie railroad dream lose3 stearia 


LEWISTON <AP) - What may • 
be the last train lo run on traclu 
connecting Lewiston and 
Grangeville has completed its 
journey^ 

The- 'trip, which started 
Tuesday, took two days with 
stops in Lapwai, Craigmont, 
Grangeville and Cottonwood. At 
aboQt 8:30 a.m. Wednesday, the 
train left Collonwood, heading 
for Oaigmorn and Reubois. 

The entin had 28 cars, indud-. 
ing 19 cars filled with grain and 
four containing canola. 

. “It was an uneventful run, 1 
don’t think there were any prob- ' 


lems with the weather," vice 
president and general manager 
of Comas Prairie RailNet, Kevin • 
Spradlin, said about the 91-year- 
old line’s last trip. 

fn September, the Surface 
Transportation Board in 
Washington, D.C., approved a 
request by Camas Prairie RailNet 
to abandon 67 miles of track. 'lihe 
railroad was losing money opetat- 
ing the line. . / 

With its 3,000-fbot climb in ele- 
vation and numerous trestles and 
tunnel^ the line was featured in 
the movies “Wild, Wild West" 
arid “Breakheart Pass." 


Cars can ' easily moice the mp 
in. three Kours,*but trains cannot ■ 
About 75 peifcent of the train 
route has to be rtm at 15 mpU or 
less berause of inclin^ tuni^Qr 
track conditions, Spradihi saidi 
One sm^ se<^on of the r^te 
between^ Lewiston' imd 
Sweetwater Will continue to-be 
used, for a short tim^ Spradlin 
' said. 'The railroad is nego^tlng 
contracts with custamers;for-(bo' 
service. • i < • ,t 

“Weil Just see how it develops. 

If we’re only handling a few 
it probably won't last that lonfe,” 
Spradlin sddL -, ”, 


City seeks to prevent downtown eentdr 


OGDEN, Utah (AP) - 'Ihe dry 
is seeking to prevent a church 
from opening a center'down- 
town for low-income people. 

The New Day Christian 
_ Rewurce Life Center wants to- 
ope'n the facility for low-income 
people to “reconstruct their 
lives." 

“It’s interesting that the dty 
would come out against some- 
thing that wants to help the 
city,” New Day director/pastor 
Roy Sartcr said. 

“There are locations where- 
they (homeless shelters and 
soup kitchens) are appropriate, 
and downtown is not one of 
them," said Greg Montgomery, 
dty planning manager. 

The building is in the Central 
Business District Zone, which 
does not allow soup idtehens, 
homeless shelters or mi^ons. 

Soner said the center is none 
of the above. 

.He said New Day requires par- 

Tqbe offers 
to help repaint 
rnascot mural 

LEWISTON (AP) - The Nez 
Perce tribe is offering to help 
Salmon River High School sin- 
. denis repaint their mascot after, 
students decided to replace the' 
65-ycar-old Indian Savages mas- 
cot with dual mascots featuring a 
white woman and white man, 
both riding horses. 

The students said they did not 
believe the Indian Savages por- 
trayal was derogatory, bur they 
wonted to have a symbol that did 
not offend other cultures. 

Last year Salmon Hj^ School 
in eastern Idaho was threatened 
with a lawsuit by parenis of 
Ipdian students who said the 
Indian Savages mascot was 
demeaning to minorities. 'That Is 
still unresolved. ■ 

Principal Marilyn Giddlngs 
said s tudents met recently with 

mural. As a result, the tribal 
council offered to give the s(u- 
de'lTts $1,200 tO'$l,500 to com- 
plete the. painting with the help 
of a tribal artist. 

Scott said ho offered his assis-’ 
lance- because he was impressed 
students took the initiative to 
.change the image out of concern 
Jor other 


ddpants to sign a six-month con- 
tract to stay In the prograin. It is 
meant to help people who are 
low-income, "but not necessarily 
homeless, become productive 
-Citizen* and reconstruct their- 
lives. 

'“We are not going to be a slop 
house," Sartcr ^d. , ' 

Sorter sold partidpams, many 
of whean' have government bene- 
fits, agree to pay 30 percent of 
their income for rent They will 
also be required to attend dass- 
es for resume writing, life skills, ’ 


job placement,.pcrsonal fmonce 
and spirituality. 

The zoniiu restrictions have 
been arouna since, the mid 80's, 
Montgomery said. What is ne(r 
-is that -in the last year,, the dty 
has “strengthened the regula- 
tions” behind the zoning after 
becoming concerned that “evfeiy 
other house was a rehab, and 
.there was no neighborhood leb. 

“If you want to promote down- ‘ 
town, you don’t do it by making 
it so people don't want to go 
down there,” Montgomery said. 



Watch your iDailbbx! 


Help Idaho's itids this season 
' by, supponUlg the 

Idaho Yoiith ijaudi iii 


Parke’s Magic Valley Funeral Home 

&• ■ ■ 

Twin Falls Cemetery 
Invite you- to attend the ■ . . ■ ■ 
Memorial Christmas Tree Lighting Service i 
Saturday, .Dixember I6,,20(W, Elt,7 PM at 

Parke’s Funeral Home ^ 
2551 Kimberly Road • Twin Falls ■ 
208 - 735-0011 . 

Come join u. in rcmemlicrinr your loved ones tiiis holidny I 
season. Special tree ornaments will be provided with the liame J 
of your loved onei i ' ' 'l 

Evcryiinc is welcume, and we need not have served your . i 
family in the past fill' you to attend. i 


“They just showed a lot of. 
dBss,"hesald. 

Giodings said the students ore 
delaying In accepting the tribe’s 
offer in an attempt not to hurt 
other artists* feelings who may 
also be Interested in pointing the 
muraL .... 

• if dife tribe's ToffeTIs^'ccepted, 
as Glddln^ .expects it will b^ it 
will eliminate having to- raise 
money to paint the murals, one 
on each <aid of the gymnasium. 


'■ i' 

ThB Tlmes^UeMs 
Marketplace 
classifieds to tutn 
possessions 
Ihtq cash, ,. 



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SMnas«/rMv»4to 

^ Sally Quallt of Malta, left, and RotaMario Badko of Burtay paruaa tha Burley 
Feitival of Traet Thuraday. The featJvaJ continues through Saturday at the old 

Bnnar'a alnrs a <i ... 


:t;neevqrk icAPC^jicic:^ 

Hemingway, the Idaho conserva* 

tionist and sometime writer who is 

the eldest son of novell^ ^cst 
Hemingway, was hospitalized in 
aidcal conation Thur^y follow- 
ing complicotions from heart 
surgery. 

The 7S-year-old, born John 
^dlcy Nicanor Hemingway, was 
in “very critical condition" 
Thursday, said New York Weill- 
Cornell Medical Cenidr spokes- 
worrmn Kathy Robinson. She said 
the family asked that no further 
information be released. 

He is-thc'father of actress 

Safe Kids 
Coalition offers 
car seat checks 

Tha TlmefrNows 

RUPERT - The first of three 
car safety seat check programs, 
offered by the k^c Valley Safe 
Kids Coalition, will be iidd today. 

Safety techniriaps will check 
scats to make sure they haven’t 
been recalled, check installation, 
and see whether it needs to be 
replaced. 

The checks are free. 

Today’s checks will be offered 
from 4 to 7 p.m. at Workman 
Pontiac Cadillac CMC Buick. 
Fifth and E streets, Rupert. 

Future checks are slated for 4 
to 7 p.m. on Dec. 8 at the Twin 
Falls Festival of Trees, 241 Main 


Maiiid Hemingway,' actress^nodel 

Margaux. who died of a drug over- 
dose in 1996, and an older daugh- 
ter, Muffet. 

His sister-in-law. Bee Pierce, 
told The Idaho Statesman on 
Wednesday that he fell 111 while 
en route to Europe, underwent 
surgery but went into cardiac 
■ arrest when a suture burst. She 
said Hemingway was on life sup- 
.port and family members were 
deciding whether to discontinue 
the treatmety. 

Hemingway’s early life was 
recounted in his father’s “A 
Moveable Feast.” 


The boy, -nicknamed “Bumby,”” 
spent his toddler years in Parisian 
cafes frequented by writers such 
as F. Scott Fitzgerald. Gertrude 
Stein and her partner, Alice B. 
Toklas, were hi-s godparerits and • 
frequently babysat for him. 

As a teen-ager, he visited his 
father in Pamploma, Spain; ' 
Havana, and Key West, Fla., 
where the pair bonded by hunt- 
ing, fishing and boxing together. 

The elder Hemingway commit- 
ted suicide in Ketchum, Idaho, 
where he had a home, in 1961. 

“When he was with you, you 
. were the total center of his atten- 


tion. But when 1 left to go b'ack to • 
school, I was out of his mind," 
Hemingway told The New York 
Times in June 1999. 

“He was my hero.” 

Hemingway, a big and' stout, 
man who resembled his famous 
fatlier, recalled their relationship 
in his 1986 memoir, “The 
Misadventure.s of a Fly 
Fisherman: My Life With and 
Without Papa." 

A longtime IdahoTesidc-nt,”he~ 
sem-d as a merhlxjr of the state’s 
fish and game commis.sion and is 
known for his conservation 
efforts. 


Babbit Instinct says to make recommendation 

Rfl T IM17C . T». 


BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) - 
Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt 
says he is inclined to recommend 
that Pompeys Pillar, the sand- 
stone butte in south Fentral 
Montana bearing explorer 
William Clark's carved signa- 
ture, be designated a national 
monument. 

“My instinct listening to you 
is, 'Yes, I should make a recom- 
mendation to the president,”' 
Babbitt said during a public 
meeting here Wednesday. “I 
haven’t heard anything that 
would dissuade me from doing 
that.” 

President Clinton can make 
the designation by executive 


order; congressional approval is 
not required. 

Th pillar is now a national his- 
toric landmark: national monu- 
ment status would afford greater 
' protections. Babbitt said he has 
discussed the change svith 
Montana’s congressional delega- 
tion. American Indian leaders 
and local officials. 

He also heard mostly positive 
comments U’ednesday from area 
residents and those imere.sted in 
preserv’ing the site, but there was 
some concern about future devel- 
opment near Pompeys Pillar, 
including construction of a high- 
speed grain elevator. 

Babbitt said monument status 


List- 


would not restrict activities off of 
the Bureau of Land- Management 
iand where the huite is located. 

The elevated status was a wel- 
come prospect for officials and 
presenationists and those inter- 
ested in promoting Montana dur- 
ing the upcoming bicentennial oi 
the Lewis and, Clark Expedition. 
A new interpretive center 
already-is planned. 

Pompeys Pillar, iibout 25 miles 
east of Billings along the 
Yellowstone River, is expected to 
attract 200.000 visitors a year 
during the 2004-2006 bicentenni- 
al, manager Dick Kodeski sard. 
That compares to about 40,000 
visitors over the past year. 


■ It SI (or adults, 50 cents for children. For more Information, call 878-TREE. 4 to 7 p.m. on Dec. BonMza 

— • ' - Motors, 325 Overland Ave.. 

' — : — : Burley. 


Festival ; 


Continued from B1 

■ Grinches from day ones to hand 

• puppet ones. to Beany Baby 

• Grinches. There’s even a Clinch 
"star" on top, its little beady yel- 
'Jew eyes twinkling above its 

f defiant smile. 

; Poo Wright-PuUiam, the bird- 
j woman of ih.e Wood River 
' Valley, decked a live pine with 
“orangaments" > black sun* 
flower seeds couched in half* 

. orange holders, cranberry 
, strings and pine cones smeared 
. with peanut butter and bird 
*' seed. The tree is designed to be 
left outside for the birds to' 
munch on, she said. The 


Plan- 


Rotary Club put together a 
Vintage Fifties tree featuring 
some of the best loved toys of all 
time - Slinkys, Tinker Toys, pin- 
whccls and yo-yos. 

Judy Whitmyre lassoed a cow- 
boy Christmas tree, complete 
with clay cowboy boots, calf rop- 
ers, saddles, steer riders and a 
tree-topping Santa Claus shc4iff, 
augmented by lariat ornaments, 
straw bows and rusted tin stars 
she found at Joann’s Fabrics in 
Twin Falls. It was one of 

four trees Whitmyre, a design 
major in cjillege, put together 
for the festival. 

“Christmas has always been 


an exciting time of the year for 
me. It’s a time when 1 can 
express my creativity,” she said. 
"The only problem is that by the 
, time I'm finished here 1 have no 
interest in decorating my own 
tree.” 

Last year's festival raised 
521^00 for the Blaine County 
Senior Citizen Center, said coor- 
dinator Marcia Mode-Stavros. 

This year’s proceeds will help 
ynth remodeling the dining room 
in the senior center and subsidiz- 
ing Meals for Wheels. It also will 
be used to provide nutritious 
snacks for KidShop, a before* 
and-after school program. 


Continued from B1 
Superintondeni.Nick.Hallett 
-described the decisibn to only 
allocate $515,000 to Acequia in 
on analogy using an old car. 

. “You wouldn’t put enough 
money in a lO-to-12-year-old car 
to make It brand new,” he said. 
.“But if it is reliable, you might 
put enough money in it to keep it 
going.”' 

i-* Comments from the communi- 
' ty will be considered in the final 
_^-pIan. 

••s “I think the board meeting will 
be interesting,” Acequia 
Principal Terry Gamer said. “We 
need people to come and bring 
positive ideas, not just criti- 
cisms." 


More Infbmtatlon 

Wtet: A Minidoka County School . 
Board special meeting 
WtmuSp .m.. Mondoy 
* WfMre: Acequia Qcrnemaiy School 
Why; To discuss the future of the 
school and what Improvements 
should, a J will, be made 
Who: The mocUng Is open to the 
public. 

Ideas, both from the staff and 
' administration at the school and 
from parents and residents of 
Acequia, will be considered, 
.Halleti said. He added that 
Gamer had already approached 
him with other suggestions about 
how that money might spent. 


While (he facility is outdated, 
it is still very serviceable.- board- 
member George MacDonald 
said. 

“There is some substantial 
amount of classroom spacc'lhar 
is irt good condition." MacDonald 
said. 

But school officials .said all talk 
about spending the money is con- 
tingent on voters approving a 
plaht facility levy; A vote on the 
levy would likely take place on 
Feb. 6. 2001. 

Times-Navs wriltr Aarvn Bwck 
can be reached at the Mini-Cassia 
Bureau at 677-4042. Ext. ItO. or 
by e-mail at abrock^magic- 
vallcy.com. 


Know the score? Read T/ie 77/nes-Afews sports pages 


Continued from B1 

• 11. Wells Fargo, a nationwide 
bank with offices in Twin Falls, 

• 12. Idaho Farm Bureau, 
which offers Insurance and 
financing for farmers and other 
rural-related activities. 

• 15. Sinclair Oil Corp., based 
in Sun Valley. 

• 16. Qwest, the largest phone 
service company operating in 
Idafib. 

• 17. Rcgence BlueSItield of 
Idaho, a Lewision-based insur- 
ance company with a large pres- 
ence in the Magic Valley. 

• 19. Blue Cross of Idaho, the 
top acddcnt/hcalth/Ufe insurance 
company in Idaho. 

• 20. St. Luke’s Regional 
Medical Center, a Boise hospital 
that owns and operates Sf. Luke’s 
Wood River Medical Center in 
Hailey. 

• 22. Trinity Health System, an 
Indiana-based Catholic not-for- 
profit hospital. system which 
operates several hospitals in 
Idaho, including Boise’s Saint 
-Alphonsus Regional Medical 
Center and Si. Benedicts Family 
Medical Center in Jerome. 

T--??.*-ConAgro..wIudi operates- 

the Lamb Weston plant in Twin 
Falls, which employs about 800 
workers. 

• 26. Wal-Mart Stores Inc., 
which opcraie.s stores in Burley 
and Jerome, and h»s plans for a 

Lecture 

Continued from B1 
The Environmental Resource 
Center of Ketcimm is sponsoring 
the program, with grams from 
the Idaho Humanities Council 
and Base Mountiiin Properties. 

Since Idaho industry and agri- 
culture increasingly are hecom- ' 


store in Twin Falls. . 

• 30. Winco Foods Ihc., a Boise- 
based grocery chain with a .store 
in Twin Fall.s. 

• 32. Amalgamated Sugar, 
based in Ogden. Utah, with 
plants in Paul and Twin Falls. 

' • 34. Church of the Nazarene. 

• 35. Idaho Water Users 
Association, . 

• 38. J.A. & KathoTi AlbcrtMui 
Foundation. 

• 39. Clear Channel 
Communications, owner of four 
Twin Falls radio station.s, 

• 40. Assembly of Cod, 

• 45. Clear Springs Foods, the 
world’s largest producer of 
farmed rainbow trout, based in 
the Buhl-Hagerm.in area. 

• 49. Key Bank, owner of 40 “ 
bank branches, including se\*eral 
in the Mdg/c Valley. 

• 50. D.L. Evans Bank, a 
Burley-based hank overseen- in 
pan by fomier Gov. Jolin Evtm.s. 

• 54. Intermoimtain Health, 
wliich operates Cassia Regional 
Medical Center in Burley, 

, • 55. AT&T, the state's large.se 
cable television provid^, and the 
- main-cubk•-|>^ovider••in■'the““ 
Bu^ley•Rupe^ area, 

• 57. Magic Valley Foods, a 
major food grower and processor 
.Tnd owner of Idaho’s large.st . 
locally Owned winery. 

! 61. Norco Inc., a statewide 


medical lu>me car? supply comp.!- 
ny with outlets in Twin Falls and 
Burley. 

• 64, WestCoast Hospitaliiy 
Corporatihn. large innkceping 
company that owns and operates 
Cavanaugh's Canyon Springs . 
•Hotel in Twin Fulls. 

• 66. Horizon Air, which ser- 
vices Su n Valley. 

•’fi7.'lntermoumain Indastrics. 
the parent company of 
Intermoimtain Gas, which sen’es 
communities all across soutiiern 
-Idaho. 

. • 68. Idaho'Housing Finance 
Auchurity. 

• 69. Power Eijgineers, based 
in Hatley, the city's liirge.st 
employer. 

. • 74. Sean* Roebuck & Co. 

• 78. Rungen, developer of 
-ogrictilrnresrclated pro'ducl.sT" ‘ 

based in Buiil. 

• 85. Jackson’s Frwd Siore.s. 

• 88. Clanbia Inc., cheese pro- 
ducer with plants in Twin Falls, 
Richfield. anrIGcxiding. 

• 90. Idaho Supreme Po'tatws, 
a potato flake manufacturer with 
a plain in Raft River. 

— ••91.-SpcarrMnnufacturingrn — 
Jerome-hased.pipe fiuing.anri, 
valve manufacturer. 

•'97. Verizon, a Washingiim- 
hased lelecummunicaiions com- 
pany wiili growing operations in 
die .Magic X'.illey, 


ing major exporters to interna- 
tiohal markets, the HRC is 
expanding the theme to indude 
global perspectives on the envi- 
ronment, center executive liirec- 
tor Molly Goodyear said. 

As more Americans under- 
stand the importance of the 


environment on a society, they 
believe good enviromiienial 
habits around the woriil will 
benefit everyone, (loiMlveai 
said. 

The annual lectures a.re 
named after the late I'.S Sen. 
Frank Church. D-ldaho: 


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- INS deports family after 10 years Man gets life for Yoserriite killing: 

cpnvAMC iv-ov, /AD> A r -1 : ^ 


SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) - A 

famUy-of-illcgal immigrants from 

_I*olamI-who.liad lived in Spokane 

the past 10 years were deported 
Thursday by ’ the U.S. 
Immigration and Naturalization 
” Scrv’icc. 

Friends of B^dan and Miro 
Babinski were- outraged ar the' 
government’s insistence that the 
.couple and daughter. Martyna 
, leave the United States. 

“They’re a hardworking couple 
who just wanted to.be citizens,” 
said Linda Green, a friend and 
'neighbor. “We let every ^!om. 
.;Dick and Harrj- in here. We let 
people in here who are on wel* 

• fare. Here you have hardworking 

• people.'’ 

INS officials said (he couple 
lost their court challenges to 
t deportation oruer.s, and Inter 
[Staged fraudulent marriages in 
; an effort to remain here. 

“They ca'me as visitors and 
[never went' home,” Irene 
. Morten.sen. INS spokeswoman in 
Seattle, said Thursday. “Their 
claims were denied by the courts 
’ and they’re giting home.” 

The family Itoarded a plane 
Thursiiny morning, Mortensen 
said. Tiiey did not have to pay for 

Fire destroys 
school’s oldest 
building 

: REXBURG (AP) - The oldest j 
building at Ricks College was 
destroyed- by fire Wednesday as 
it was being demolished. 

The Jacob Spori huildihg, built 
in 1903. was being demolislicd by 
a bulldozer Wednesday, school 
spokesman Don Sparhawk said. 

•A cable accidentally sparked 
the fire after 3 a.m., Sparha\v); 
said. Fire and school officials 
allowed the blaze to finish the job 
the demolition crew had begun. 

Officials of the Mormon 
church-owned' school plan to 

• build a new Spori building to 
l^once again house the school’s 
[communication and arts depart- 
mems.- 

In June, the church announced 
plans to e.-^pand Ricks College to 
a four-year institution and even-, 
tually rename it Brigliam Young 
Univcrsiiy-Idaho. - — 


by the conns and they 're 
gmglioine. ' 

- Irene Mortcasen, 
INS s[X)keswoman 


thefliglit to Poland. 

. The INS has no leeway in such 
matters, .she said. 

Bogdan Babinski worked os a 
meat- cutter for S&P Meats Inc. 
Hi.s wife worked at the Colonial 
Care nursing home. Their daugh- 
ter wa.s n middle school student. 
The family's fight to remain in 
(he United States effectively 
ended Sept. 29, 1997, when the 
9tli U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals • 
refu.scd to review their case. 

They were ordered to report 
for deportation on Jnn. 30, 1998, 
but did not respond. 

On N6v. 20 of.this year, INS 
agont.s arrested the fnmiTy in the 
home they Inillt four years ago on 
Spoknnc’.s South Hill. 


The parents were sent to a 
— Seattle dctcntion fadllty."'rhelr“ 
daughter was‘kepfarMartin“ 

Hall, a juvenile detention facility 
in Medical Lake that contracts 
svith the INS. 

Teachers and some friends 
were aUowd to visit Martyna._ 

Green called INS officials, 
politicians and attorneys in a 
futile search for help. Their 
daughters were best friends and 
^vere on the swim team together. 

"She doesnT know Polish, so 
she won’t know hoW to go back to 
- school there,” Green said of 
Martyna. "We want to help, we 
just don’t know who to call,” 

Thefiabinskis arrived in the 
United States in April 1990. 
\Vhcn Miro Babinski began work- 
ing a few months later, she hard- 
ly spoke English, Snrff said, but 
she became a favorite of resU 
dents of the home. 

Residents have been asking 
where she went, Sarff said. 

Co-worker Penny Clarke said , 
the family arrived here with all 
their possessions in one suitcase. 

“They wanted to come to the 
United States to better them- i 
selves and make a good home life I 

for Martyna,” Clarke said. I 


FRESNO. CaUf. (AP) - A motel 
handyman was sentence to life 


for as long as I can remember 
"became a reality, in thls'terHble” 


-without parole Thursday foi cri m e , aiiJ -p am sorry and 

beheading a Yosemite National ashamed.” 


Park naturalist, clearing the way 
for his pial in the grisly slayings 
of three tourists. 

Under a plea bargain that 
sparrf him the possibility of a 
death sentence, Cary Stayner, 
.39, admitted he killed 2&.ycnr- 
old Joie Armstrong last year 
after kidnapping and trying to 
sexually assault her. 

• “I gave in to the terrible dark 
dreams that I tried to subdue," a 
sobbing Stayner, shackled and 
wearing a yellow prison jump- 
suit, said in federal coun. "The 
craziness that lurked in my mind 


ashamed.” 

Stayner is also accused of 
killing Yosemite tourists Carole 
Sund, 42, her daughter Juli, 15, 
and , their Argentine friend 
Silvina Pelosso, 16. Prosecutors 
have not said whether they will, 
seek the death penalty. 

The three were last seen alive 
' in February 1999 at a motel out- 
side the. park where Stayner 
lived and worked. More than a 
month later, a burned rental car 
was found abandoned along log- 
png road. In the trunk were the 
bodies of Mrs. 

Sund and Pelosso. Jitli Sund’s 


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body found latcr ln_a 

An^trong’s headless body yvas 
found in the woods near where 
she lived in the park. Stayiitjr 
was arrested three days latdr, 
after a sweeping investigatioti 
and manhunt that began five 
months’ earlier when the thWe 
tourists disappeared. 

In court, Armstrong’s mother, - 
Lesli, wept os he addressed her. 

“I wish I could take it baiiC, . 
but I can’t,” Stayner’ told her."^ 
wish I,coiUd tell you why 
such a thing, but I don’t ev6n 
know myself.” ' 

Lesli Armstrong said she can 
foresee forgiving her daughter^ 
killer someday. 


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IdahoAVest 


er says representative s 
re^rt on eleanup had errors 


.. , COEUR d'ALENE - The U.S. 
i^nvironmenial Protection 
Agency calls Rep. Helen 
]Cpenoweth-Hage’s hefty cri- 
.tique. about its deanup opera* 
.cions in the Silver Volley cither 
in error or a mischaracteriza* 
tion. - 

Chenoweth-Hage last month 
published a 60*ptige report 
' ^accusing the agency of wasting 
- jm^ons of taxpayer. dollars with 
, "questionable results.” 

' But the department in a writ- 
ten Irespohse defends its 
..^eanuD efforts with the state' 
ahd mining companies, citing 
dramatic decreases in thS^ver-’ '• 
fage blood-lead level of children ' 
|at Bunker Hill. 

“We are absolutely confident 
that the cleanup of yards, public 
jareas, rights of way and com* 
imerdal properties has resulted 
jin a healthier-place for the”chll* 


dren of the Silver Valley to 
live,” an endosure with the let*' 


ter states.- 


Cleanup activities included 
removing lead-laced soil from 
more than 1,700 residential and 
commerdal properties and 2.S 
million cubic yards of mine tall- 
.ings from the South Fork of the 
Coeur d'Alene River and tribu- 
tary gulches, agency officials said. 

The average blood-lead level 
in Bunker Hill children dropped 
from 40 to 4 micrograms per 
deciliter over the past 15 to 20 
years, the Icner states. 

Accusations from Chenoweth* 
•Hage and other critics that 
buried waste is leaching toxic 
metals into the South Fork are 
unproven, the letter continues. 
It labels the lawmaker’s daims 
“either factually in error or. a 
tmsch^cterizadon .of our .work . 
'in the Silver Valley. 


Opening arguments begin 
in 25-year-old Idaho murder 


I RIGBY (AP) - Opening argu* 
•ments in the murder trial of a 

I Mracan national who had b^n 
living in Cassia County in recent 
months saw lawyers grill witness 
,es in two languages about events 
jlcading to the grisly discovery of 
>Juan Huizaris body 25 years ago. 

. Rarairio Resendez, 47, is 
chained with second-degree mur- 
der for Huizaris stabbing death. 
The two both in their raid* 
20s at the time, worked together 
at the Linden Butikofer Ranch 
(near Roberts until Huizar was 
{killed on June 15, 1975. 

I Resendez contends he killed 
jhis former roommate and friend 
in self defense. He faces up to . 
life in prison if .convicted. 

Authorities say Res endez f led to 

Mexico after the slaying, then 
returned and had been living 
near Burley with relatives. . 
-Prosecutor Stephen Clark 
referred to wounds on Huizar’s 
back as evidence t^t Huizar was 
not attacking Resendez when the 
^0 got into on alcohol-charged 
argument about who was respon* 
^ble for moving some irrigation 
gpe. 

;-r.“That body tells a story - 
^ere were .cuts on his. right 
Jfest, do Ws.right.temple down/ 
the bone, nabs in the back, a 
l^b in the buttocks and, when 
was turned over they found a 
^ on the right side of his chest' 


and the left side of his chest,” 
Clark said on Wednesday. 
“Within minutes of being 
stabbed, Juan was bleeding to 
death"." ' ' 

' But defense attorney R. Keith 
Roark told jurors the fight start- 
ed with punches being thrown 
before the two men fell 'to the 
ground “wrestling, grappling." 

Once on the ground, 'Roark 
said, Hui^ hit Resendez with a . 
metal sprmkler head, opening a 
deep gash in Resendez-’s-head 
before choking the wounded 
Resendez with a piece of irriga- 
tion pipe. Fearing for his life, 
Resendez reached for the 6-inch 
dagger he had in his waistband, 
the lawyer said. 

JlHe-begamto-stab-Huizar-L 


the back, flailing with the knife 
in his right, hand,” Roark said. • 
“He never had any intention of 
killing anyone, or even getting 
into a ^ght. He feared for his life 
so he struck back as hard as he 
could.” . 

• Resendez fled to Arizona 
before being deponed to Mexico 
and returning to the United 
States a few years later. He 
worked in California and Idaho 
before being arrested in Boise 
last May.-. 

"Romirio Imew there would be 
an investigation, but he didn’t 
know how seriou^y he had hurt 
Juan Huizar,” Roark said. 


High court 
layeirtiims 
campaign 
finance fine 

BOISE (AP) - The Idaho 
Supreme Court, in its first 
review of the state’s 26-year-old 
Sunshine Law on campaign 
finance disclosure, overturned a 
$100 fine imposed on a failed 
Democratic legislative candi- 
date and his treasurer. 

But both sides said the 4-1 
opinion issued Thursday, with 
Justice Wayne -Kidwell dissent- 
ing, sidestepped the central 
issue on appeal: whether money 
spent on a candidate’s bcHalf 
amounts to a reportable comri- 
budoQ. 

, And Chief. Deputy Secretary 
of State Ben Ysursa said the 
damage the ruling could do to 
the principle of requiring that 
political contributions be report- 
ed before an election goes far 
beyond the size of the fine. 

“This is really, in our opinion, 
contrary to the spirit of the 
Sunshine Law, which is piihlic 
disclosure,” Ysursa said. 

The decision reversed a ruling 
against Lewiston -attorney John 
Bradbury and campaign treasur- 
er Susan Cook by former 2nd ' 
District Judge Ida Rudolph 
Leggett. 

In late October 1998, Leggett 
upheld a magistrate’s ruling that 
Bradbury and Cook failed to dis- 
close a contribution from the . 
state Democratic Party within 
-48,_hours of its receipt, as 
required by the Sunshine Law. 

The $2,861 contribution con- 
sisted of brochures sent out on 
Bradbury’s behalf before he lost 
his 1996 general election contest 
to Republican Rep. Dan Madcr 
of Genesee. _ . . 


Former zoo manager files grievance over firing 

BOISE (AP) - Former Zoo Ombudsman Pierce Murphy. - basis Th»-v hnv,. h,.«n 
^ise Manager David Wayne has Meanwhile, the U S 
filed a ^levance with the city . . Department of Agriculture has 
wer his firing in the wake of an fined the zoo $950 and issued a 
August tiger mauling at the zoo. warning after conducting an 

:__.."?y*??»Jbe.2fm>.manager-foi^._inubsiigation into tlic-ricer 
£4 years, was terminated on attack. 

Until a new zoo manager can 


Tuesday by Mayor Brem Coles. 
The mayor would say only that 
he was disturbed by information 
on Wayne’s role in the tiger 
attack compiled by Community 


be hired, Jim Dumont, Boise’s 
superintendent of recreation, and • 
Greg Callahan, tiic lead zookeep- 
cr, will do -the job on an interim 


basis. -They have been running 
-the zoo since Wayne wa.s put on 
admini.strative leave several days 
after the attack, city officials 
said. 

- - fhe-ciiy-has lO days to"set”a~ 
hearing in response to Wayne’s 
grievance, said Tammy Rice, city 
human resources director. A 
grievance process can take up to 
15 days before a‘ finding i 
reached, she .said. 


uy c.onimuniiy . cr, wijj flo -the job on an interim ' reached, she .said. 

MVRMC Foundation Festival of Trees ^ K 



festival of 

^ _’iT\ V 

REINDEER 
RAMBLE < 

FUN.RUN/WALK 

DATE; SATURDAY, DEC. 9™ 

8 TIME: 10:30 AM. REGISTRATION 
8 LOCATION: CSI GYM FOYER 

I * 2 MIU WAIX 2 N|ll£ RUN * 4 MILE RUI^ 

Prizes awarded lo first and Second Place Over-All Winners, for male and female runners 
and walkers. 

• Pre-Registration: >18 by Dec. 1st 
• Race Day Registrations: ‘20 • Children under 12: '12 

Entry Fee includes Post-Run Party, Long Sleeved T-shirt and 



Festival Admission at 241 MaimAve. W., Twin Falls 


Sponsored by: 

KeyBank 

For more information cail The MVRMC Foundation Office at 737-2480 

Proceeds will benefit the Magic Valley-Heart Fund & Area Quick Response Units 

iVlAGIG VALLEY 

REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER 

S foundation, INC. 

»•-»■ POX 2ZU » TWIN FAL 1. S ; - 1 IV.Mt O- K IT C 1 . : : 1 I 

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|*arihandle motel refuses 
|b let Aryan leader preach 


f^OEUR d'ALENE, (AP) - „ 
pandpoint-based racist organiza* 
tlpn vowed to pursue legal action 
3tier a northern Maho motel can- 

i led a room rental agreement. 
Vincent Bcrtolli'ni, who calls 
tnself ah evangelist with the , 
^ Hour Remnant Messenger, 
id he rented the conference 
bm to give Aryan Nations 
ider Richord-Butlcr a pulpit for 
Jiday services. 

^«Butler, 82, lost his 20-acrc 
^urch and compound north of 
l^yden Lake in October, 


month after a Kootenai County 
jury returned a $6.3 million di^ 
damages award. 

Butler has conducted small 
group services in a $107,000 
home in Hayden that BertoUini 
bought after the Aryan leader 
moved out of his compound. 

“Pastor Butler is preaching 
again!” BertoUini said in an e- 
mail announcement this week 
after renting. the conference 
room at the Silver Lake Motel in 
Hayden. 

“Let’jfiU it up,” he said. 


I^ouit upholds refusal to divulge 
iformation about tax liens 


? ALT LAKE CTTY (AP) - The 
^ Tax Commissioti’s refusal to 
tblidy divulge information about 
liens against politicians or 
residents has been upheld 
^ the state Records Committee. 
>The committee voted 4-3 
.Wc^esday to deny an appeal of 
^e tax agency’s confidentiality 
iSdsion by the Deseret News. 

'• ^ The Ty Commisaon docs have 
W'oblfgation to protect the tax- 
Myer information,” said Max 
_^pns, a.records committee-mem-- - 
. and director of the state 
)l!&ision of History. . 

^Evons sold state law prohibits 
l^e tax ogency from releasing tax 
^ns and other information deal- 


ing with delinquent payment or 
nonpayment of individual income 
or corporate income taxes. 
Committee Chairwoman Betsy- 
Ross, n government attorney, 
agreed. . 

“This statute does hamstring 
us,"” Ross said. 

Joel Campbell, a Deseret News - 
associat^ditor, argu^ that the 
Tax ComnuMoh’s clatmed'd bak oL_ 
confidentiality threatens the con- 
cept of open and accountable gov- 


“cmmentr" 

“Token lo its condusion, it could 
mean that everything to do with 
tax returns or anything the'Tax 
Commission does is secret,” said 
Campbell 





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wmsading Gongressman; 

Lawmaker targ ets ‘b lood dia monds’ in larp-sr r^iise 

WASHINGTON lAPl - R».n I .. 


School bus ^ <^dnai apparently ran off the shoul- 

T-; der^f-the-road-and-thcTirlvcro^ 

kindergartfe - corrected, sending the bus across 
dGClUCriL 30 other both.lanes before It overturned. . .. 

1 • 1 r- ITieklndergartner, a boy, apparent. 

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viaAiilJ uuy, U Robertson yld tho.bus carrying 47 ' “Counw Coroner IJbrrisLira^ 


.WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep. 

• Tony Hall once fasted for 22 days 
to draw attention to U.& hunger 
and endured a torrent of hate 
mail for suggesting Congress 
apologue for slavery. 

Now he has a new cause;,r. 
Trymg to get holiday shoppers to 
avoid buying "blood diamonds" - 
gems whose sales fund African' 
wars in which many civilians are 
victims of atrocities. 

Working with Amnesty 
International, Physicians for 
Human Rights and others, the 
Ohio Democrat is organizing a 
protest Saturday outside a 
Tiffany & Co. store in a^. 

• Washington suburb. The groups 
previously demonstrated at a • 
Cartier’s in New York City and 
may hold other protests else- 
where. 

“Americans see images of 
' ..starving people, death and 
calamity and they turn the teJevi- 
.sion off. They don’t know what to 
do about it,” Hall said. “There is 
something they can do about thi.s. 
They don’t have to buy a dia- 
. mond without knowing the coun- 
. try of origin." 

So, at a time when many 
Americans are focused on cookie 
recipes, decorations and holiday 
discounts, Hall will be describing 
a Sierra Leone girl who was 2.5 
when rebels hacked off her hand. 

And he’ll tell of the teen rape vie- j 
tim left pregnant and armless in 
a savage campaign to punish ril- 
lagers for voting in Sierra 
Leone’s first free election. 

Diamonds are a 56 billion-a- 
year industry worldwide, with 
Americans making two-thirds of 
, all diamond purchases. Industry 
officials estimate that “conflict 
diamonds" account for about 4 
percent y^orld diamond trade; 
human rights organizations say I 
the number is closer to 15 per- | 
cent. I 



Rep. Tony Kail, D-Ohlo. testiflas on 
African Diamonds Sept. 13 on 
Capital Hill. 


monds to ensure they aren’t com- 
ing from rebel-held mines in war 
zones. Already, there are national 
certification systems in Angola 
and Sierra Leone to allow those 
governments to continue export- 
ing diamonds while a ban on 
rebel diamond expofts is 
enforced. ^ 

Tiffany & Co', says it does not 
do business with known suppliers 


of conflict diamonds, saying in a 
written statement it is “at the 
forefront of efforts to eradicate 
the tiny percentage of illicit 
stones at issue." 

Matthew Runci, executive 
director of the World Diamond 
Council, said the problem “isn’t 
something that caii be solved 
with a demonstration in front of a 
store.” 

Though Hall said he is not call- 
ing for a ^diamond boycott 
because it could hurt diamond- 
producing democracies such as 
Australia and South Africa, 
Runci said those countries still 
could be affected. 

Hall responded, “All we’re 
going to say-is, you know where 
your shirt comes from, where 
your shoes come from. Find out 
where the diamond comes from 
before you buy it." 


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LISTINGS 
THROUGH DECEMBER 5 


SATURDAY. DECa«S) 2-1 1 

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Responding to, pressure from 
governments, human rights 
groups and Hall, the World 
Diamond Council last summer, 
approved measures to track tUa- 
monds from the mine to the jew- 
elry store. The industry has 
promised to Jeiy severe penalties 
on dealers who break the rules. 

On Friday in New York, the 
U.N. General Assembly is expect- 
ed to take up a di;aft resolution' ■ 
piling for the creation of an 
international certification 
■scheme for rough, uncut dia- 


Saturday oecsmssi 2-1 1 :0 (um 

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raises pressure 
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WASHINGTON (AP) - The 
Clinton administration will keep 
talking to the Taliban militia but 
IS now looking to the United 
Nations for help in getting its 
hands on suspected terrorist 
kingpin Ositma bin Laden. 

Working with Russia, which is 
hi^ily unpopular in Afglianisian 
after a 10-year occupation that 
ended in 19H9, the United States 
IS seeking approval of .sanctions 
to deny weapons and commercial 
air traffic to the South Asian 
country. 

Meanwhile. Undersecretary of 
State Thomas Pickering; William 
Milam, the U.S. ambassador to 
Pakistan; and other U.S, officials 
have held a serie.s of meetings 
wit h Taliban representatives. 

“While iliu discusrionsrsome 

limes held at/frahban’s recjue.st, 
have not beJi W&ductive, they 
will continue, 1‘hilip Reeker, a 
State Department spokesman, 
stiid Thursday. 

“We think Taliban bears 
responsibility for bin Laden in 
territory under its control,” 
Reeker sitid. 

On Wednesday, State 
Department siwkesman Richard 
_|^cljty- jHiid.Jirhis avenue is no t 
' working ns wefl 


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FESTIVAL OF LIGHTS PARADE 

, FRIDAY DECEMBERJj 200Pjni,T-6:30PM 

Y Entera'Pcafor Just come down with your j 

. friends and family to ifJatch the annual Christmas Parade! ( 


FESTIVAL 

OF 

TREES 

DECEMBER i-IO 
At the Calvary Chapel . 
^^taln Ave. West -g 



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Familiarvibe 

Paul Revere and the 
Raideis bring theirgxxi- 
omcs rodt ’n roll bait to 
Cactus Petes Rcsdit 
Casino in Jackpot ionigjit 
and Saturday. 

Allthefrimniiigs 

The Magic Wlcy 
Regional Medical Center 
Foundation’s Festival of * 
Trees fund-raising event 
returns to downtown 
_ Falls Ibrthefiist—— 
time in a decade, scaning 
Wednesday in the Old 
* Calvary Qiapel building 

SongsQffhe 


GSIdraffla-depaitment-updatesr‘Ha^^^^ 

' By Steve Crump j- , . , — • "t i ^ v‘ 

Tlme*<«»»»wTftef .. H’siJjc first timtMliui Sieel Shartnona Jacobson as tho 


■■ By Steve Crump 
- n mae Ww n wTftef 

TWIN FALLS - Now a word 
from (he original Backstreet 
Boys ... 

“We decided to modernize 
‘Hamlet,’ set it in a back alley," 

. .said.CoUege of Southern Idaho • 
Theater Department instructor 
Laine Steel. “And ro cut some of 
the dialogue and characters. I 
don’t think people here would 
sit sdll for a threo-and-half-hour 
‘Hamlet.’ " 

T hoiiRh Shakespeare has been-- 
updated and moved to a bad 
neighborhood before ("West 
Side Story" and Baz LuhHman's 
1995 movie version of “Romeo 
_-and.]luliet,^to name-two), -this- 
production remains.faithful to 
the essential themes of power, 


[Light up 
the town 

Expanded downtown 
holiday Fesdval of 
Lights Parade rolls 


‘■<WhiifcThoC(iii«ge,rfS 
<d^ Theater Department will pre> . 

' 6om WUfiam Shakespeare's ' ...... 

•HanlcL’ . 

' Whan: Room lid, College of 
Southern Itloho Rne Ms Center 
- -audltoriumrTwin Fells. — 
*• Whore Wednesday, Thursday and 
Dec. 8-9, 13-14. 15-16.8p.m. 

’ Hw much: Tickets,' whidi arc $5 
for general admission and $3 for 
studonts and senior clUicns. may 
bo purchased at the Fine Arts box 
.. office bctwecnl4.pjn. (.fonday — ^ 
through Friday or by calling 733- 
9554, Ext. 2625. Ouc to limited 
seating, reservations should be I 

made earty. . I 

revenge and existentialism. 

And it comes on the heels of 



^VraHom Stiakespaaro 

CSI’s season opening production 
of Paul Rudnick’s "I Hate 
Hanilct." though that’s a coinci- 
dence, Steel Siiid, 

“That just happened t«i lie the 
first play .scheduled." he said. 
"They’re not related." 


It’s the first time that Steel 
has directed "Hamlet’’ in his 
many years of teaching drama - 
and Shakespeare - at CSI. But 
it’.s a project he’s looked fonvard 
to with anticipation. 

"It’s a great learning play for 
(drama studeiust." )u - <.iid ^ »\Ve 
can involve a lot of people (there 
are 20 members of the cast) and 
it's popular with audiences." 

• CSI sophomore Beau 
Davidson, who played Proteus in 
Iasi spring’s production of “Two 
Gentleman of Verona.” nets the 
“litlerole. 

“It’s very demanding because 
Hamlet is on the stage for so 
much of the time," Steel said, 
"Bui BeuuJiusiworkcd-hard-ami~ 
he does it well." 

Other cast members of Lauti 
Oclassen at Guildenstcrn. 


Shannona Jacubson as the 
. Player Dueen, Tamara Malborg 
Jis Gertrude. Rebecca J. Allred 
Jis Ophelia. Dale G. Laughlin as 
P»Ioniti.s. Dontivun Davis as 
Ltjertes. Charisse Strader as the 
Clown 2. Lisa D. Ashby as the ’ 
— Briuste.ss,..\lcx.Hannich as the — 
Player. Jiid ! iarmon as Claudius. 
Christine Wlasquez as Clown 1, 
Annie Croner as the tady*’in 
Waiting. Steeling Hoch as Osric. 
Alicia Wesi as the Player. 
Dusian Birrell as Rosencranlz, 

lion nis.M abler a.s -Beniartlr y, 

-Adam ..Myers as Horatio. Troy 
Cooper as Marcellos and 1 ‘asha 
I Iarmon as ihe Lidy in Waiting. 

- Cnmip' ■ 

cun hi- rciidial at or 

ivriic {ii jurii iit cruni/Ku rnui’icixi/- 
fi’t.'.coni 


Company of Fools Essies up ‘A Christmas Carol’ 


.The Magic Valley Chorale 
will present “The Many 
Moods ofChristmas” 
;$aturday night and 
' Sundayafietnoonatthe 
CoU^ ofSouthem Idaho 
FineArBCenterauditori- 


dm<^ dares and 
details ^ 

in Events Spbdi^c bh 

■ BageGS^y^ — — 


TWIN FALLS - In its eighth 
year, downtown’s Festival of 
Lights.Paradc is taking a new 
turn. 

The route of tonight’s parade 
has been expanded to include 
more of downtown Twin Falls 
and Old Tpwne, according to 
Tim Jones, the executive direc- 
tor of the Historic Old Towne 
Twin Falls Business 
Improvement District, 

It will.leavc Magic Valley 
High School on Main Avenue, 
tiuvel south on Second Avenue, 
turn west on Shoshone Street, 
south on Minidoka St. at the 
Depot Grill, east on Fourth 
Street to Main, then north on 
Main to Magic Valley High 
SchooL . , , 

.‘Lighted floats, sponsored by- 
merchants and civic orgnhiza- 
tions. will highlight the ev ent. 
Businesses throughout the down- 
town area will be open after the 
parade. . 



-By Karen Bossick 

Tlme»New» corrospotKlent 

HAILEY - Company of Fools is 
abolii to launch into “A 
Christmas Carole,’’ the be.st- 
known Christmas .talc in the 
world after that of the Baby Jesus 
and “ 'Twas the Night Befortr 
Christmas.” 

Buc you can bet the presents 

under your airistm as tree tha t ;. 

~you‘ve~nev'er~seen it presented 
the tvay this innovative company 
fn)m Hailey is about to present it. 

The story, set against a back- 
drop that resembles a pop-out 
Victorian Cliri.simas card, will be 
dramatized as if it were a gliost 
story being told to a little boy. 

All the oclors ami oclre.«es, ' 

EhSeze? Stioge.™!! zip r/mi •I 'A ■ 

out of tlirec roles as speedily as '-'’"Shnas Carol tonight through )ec. 30 at tho Liberty Theater In Halley. 
Santa gets sucked down a chim- i r % . . . — ■ - ‘ 

"'i , „ . ' „ . Complimented. tM’ssa on . lo =«i i>c. n. 3 pm.-.- _ , 

T “ • * Wtat'mi Company of R»|j *111 ® «» "»«* lickpH; imlcti pro Jio 

baker s 12 days of Chnstmiu - rpy^ipht-Clia'rlej- Dickens- --A “fn'la and 47 for zhliaron ages 4- 

beginmng tonight and ending cSiS.aaX! ■ ' '' 12. may be rosetvta by a cn5 cinl 

Dec. 30 at the Libeny Theater. -•WhawtUbcity Theater Hailey . 78aC520 orpurchasod 01 

Carolers singing in front of the Read All Aboot It Bookslote In Hailey 

theater and m the lobby will SCI ^ Chapter One Bobhstore in 

the festive mood, inviting audi- ^-jO, 7 p.fn.j^ Sunday, Dec. Ketctium, 

cnce members to shore their own * r' ' ' ' 

Chrisiraas spirit by dropping a shmv-s:peifonnnn«s, adding yet Past, Present and Fiiiiire The 

few coins or grMnbacfcs.into n imojer nrtislic dimeizsion-to the. ■ last givxs him a chilling glimpse 

■ of what his own dcallnvill lH' like 

- and Projeet Respect.-a4nbstnnce ™<7ThowroPcourscrls based ■ imiais hVrSind^ His wa,~i 

, ' “"““rias Dickens' story aboul a The story, wrillcn'in 1»43 
^d Channel 13 TVpetsonahty e^ciy old miser who receives a made Dickmis' name so symmy- 

Mitzi Mechnm will sign the vistt from the ghpszs ofChristmas moos with Christmas that a small 


Past, Present and Future. The 
• last gives him a chilling glimpse 
t^whiit hi.s^wn death mli Iw like 


girl in Lotnlnn askeil iiputi hear- 
ing 1.1 Dickens' death. '‘Mr. 
Dickens dead? Then will ! .ithe: 
Christmas die. tiM>?" 

‘Dickens was a greai stor.v- 
teller. He itHik themes liiat never 
luinge - like onr himi.irniy - and 
able t(i gf. tn the nut nl' the 
lie.” siiid Denise Simone, associ- 
ate artistic director of .Coinpan.v 
of Fools, 

-It-doesiTi-mattet-iii.it-ii-wiis— 
ruten-mnrc-than- HKIn c .iis .igii — 

■ reif.gnize liiile tilings 
going on in themselves- or 'in tile 
orld wii'en they s<‘e this plav." 

This particular version is'.i .sO- 
ute adaptation by Douglas 
Jone.s. tile pl.i»righl who wrote 
"Jack and ttie Beanstalk" and 
"The i'own Mouse .ami the 
Coiimry .Mouse. 

Cominmyof Fools staged Ix.th 
of these- during its four-year run ' 
in tlic valley. 

It'.-, not the iwo hour extraviv 
gan/a replete with a fog niadiine 
and ghosts coming out of the 
fli.or itiai Simone iind Director 
John (denn were involved in 
yetirs ago in Richmond, Va. 
Rather, this is a Reader'.s Digest 
condensed version with the- focus 
on the .storytelling 
It opens simply witli Simone 
telling .1 little boy. 'Tm going to 
luB you a gliost story." 

In theater vernticiiJar it’s 
known as "story theater" -a tyjx.- 

Please see CAROL Pago C4 . 






C-2 TlnwfrHewi, Twin Ftib. Idiho Friday, Otcaratwr 1, 2000 

Weekend ~~ 


^BglyEUioE dances acrosst he screen to 

;ombfnod wlro'servlces vminnnr ft,-.,. . j ^ v* 


~;r~ Combined wiro seM cea — ^ ' — 

Movies playing in south-central 
Idaho 'this weekend. Opinions are 

hy Los /\iigele.s Timc^ As-sodatcd 

^TTfess and Kiiif^u 

Ridder N{nvspapers revi'ewers.“ 

Ratings hy the Motion Picture 
Association of America are: (G) 
for general audiences; (PG) 
parental guidance urged l)ecause 
• of mateHal possibly un.suitable for 
^children; (PG-13) parents are 
strongly cautioned to give guid- 
ance for attendance of children 


younger than 13; (R) restricted, 
younger than 17 admitted only 
with parent or adult guardian; 
(NC-I7) no one younger than 17 
_admittcd 


The best thing is.its perfectly 
cast .stars: Elizabeth Hurley as the 
.tart-tongued devil' and cspeaally 
Brendan Fraser. But as written by 
Larry Gelbart, director Harold 
Ramis and Peter Tolan, the film,- 
tliough amusing from moment to 
moment, is erradc, unfocused and 


~k Outstanding . I ' I 
■ Worthy otforl i ^ , I 
▼ S^so' * I 5 Se I' 
#'Abomb j ? !3| I 


rPROH Aflomb THE WATIOII^ 


Billy Elliot (R) 

Bounce (PG-13) 
Chorilo’s Angels (PG-13) 
How the Grinch ... (PG) 
Little Nicky (PG-13) 

Men of Honor (R) 
102.Dahnatlana (G) 

Red Planet {RGit3)„- _ 

Rugrats In Paris (G) 

The 6th Day (PG-13) 
Unbreakable (PG-13) . 

You Can Count on M<^ (R) 
CAMnv'sadn^nod ' | PC 


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PG-13 Parents sifoojy^ 


R RMirtetad. ut^r i: 


, ru-ia^fBnlisifor>9t^ R fiesirtettd. uvJor 17 

PG All .130s oomtioe. som«fruioti.v roquims aecomparMna 

• p.vuni.ii ovidaneo 2!^^ ' ParoWorguanlsri 

soggttslKl • Cfiiwron urwor 13 


SOunCE KRT rMwspapers 


What’s Plavina 


IHiMri'rFails 

’Bagger Vance." fwm Cinema 
’Qcdazrlcd." Odyssey Theater 
"Best ol Show." Odyssev 
— mii'alur-1 

"Bounce," Twin Cinema 
"Buitcrlly," Lamphouse Theater 
"Charlie's Angels," Odyssey 
Theater 

"Coyote Ugly," Odyssey Theater 
"How the Grinch Stole 
Christmas,’ Twin Cinema 
’Liltte Nicky," Twin Cinema. , 

. ’Meet the Parents.’ Twin 
Cinema 

'Men of Honor.* The Orphoum 
'102 Daimolians." Twin Cinema 
, "Pay It Forward," Twin Cinema 
"The Rod Planet." Odyssey 
Theater 

’Remember the Titans.’ Twin 
Cinema 

' "The Rugrats in Pans.’ Twin 

_.(:incmo.-, 

’The 6th .Day." Odyssey Theater 
"UnDrcakablc." Twin Cinema 




Burley^ 


"Charlie's Angels.'-Contury 
_ Cinema 

"HdwilioGFinchSlolc 

Christmas,' Century Cinema 
"102 Dnlfimtians," Century 
Cinema 

~ — -iRugtatsiin.Paris," Century 
Cinema • 

Unbreakiiblc,* Century Cinema' 
"Wnai Lies Beneath." Ourtey 
Thoaicf 


"Billy Elliot," SkiTIme Cinemas 
’Bounce," SklTime Cinemas 
"Charlie's Angels." Magic 
lantern 

. "How the Grinch Stole 
Christmas.' Sun Valley Opera 
House 

’The Legend of Bagger Vance." 
Magic lantern • • • — 

"Meet the Parents." Magic 
lantern 

"Mon of Honor." Magic Lantern 
*102-Oaiamoiiens.‘ Magic 
. Lantern 

'The Rugrats in Paris," Magic 
Lantern 

"The 6tn Day," Magic Lantern 
> "Linbfeakablo,* Liberty Theater 

"Charlie's Angois.i Jerome 
Cinema 

'Little Nicky." Jerome Cinema 
-"How the Grinch Stole 

Chrislf tias," Jerome Cinema 

'102 Dalmatians." Jerome 
Cinema 

‘The Rugrats In Paris." Jerome 
Cinema 

"The 6th Day." Gooding Cinema 


4rgpit Settts * i W ttw Wrich " 

2. rUnbreakaMe,* Disney, 
ly . <• *102 Oalmatlans." Disney, 

le 4. 'Rugrats In Paris: The Movfc.* 

y PatamounL 

y 6. 'Charllo's Angels," Sony. • 

d ' • Source: ExhbltM 

L- • Reietlans Co. 

0 

d •' uncertain where iFs going. (1:33. 
PG-13, for sex^elatcd humor, lan- 
guage and some drug content) 

'Best In Show' - 

A comedy about prize dogs and 
their peculiar owners that boasts 
both bark and bite, courtesy of the 
. kind of improvisational humor 
that made director Christopher 
Guest’s last film, ‘Waiting for 
Guffman,* a cult success. A bit 
sUghter than "Gufftnan,* but when 
Fred Willard as a buffoonish TV 
commentator gets going, the 
laughs begin in earnest (1:^, 

13, for language and sex-rclaied 
materiaL) 

'BUIyQltoti 

Jamie Bell is a natural as a 
young British lad from a strike- 
bound mining town who’s deter- 
mined against obvious odds 
“faecofne'a'hallet'diincer, but the'” 
film’s determination to overdo 
surc-fut! material makes it impos- 
sible to wholeheartedly embrace. 
(L'lfi. R, for language.) 

'Bounce' ' ' 

Ben Affleck 'and Gwyneth 
Paltrow star in a ricochet 
romance benyeen a woman who 
lost her husband in a plane crash 
and an ad exec who gave said 
spouse his place on the plane. Die ' 
love story as moral parable, a live- 
ly, lovely story of personal and 
romantic redemption. PG-13 
(mature si.(uadohs,impliedscx) 

'Butterfly' 

The touching story of the preco- 
— aouA-boy and his grandfatherly 


schoolteacher in tho-days before 
Spain’s Republic fell to the 
Fascists in 193S. Interesting char- 
■•acters and strojig performarices, 
however; are undermined by the' 
-movie’s heavy allege^ - eveiy- 
. thing represents something else. 

‘Chafle’s Angeb' 

This reworking of the 1970s 
TV Mries is a potato chip of a 
movie. Tasty and lightweignt, it’s 
fine for a cinematic snack, but 
making it an entire meal really 
isn’t advisible. Cameron Diaz, 
Drew Barrymore, Lucy Liu and 
Bill Murray star. (1:32. PG-13 for 
action violence, innuendos and 
some sensuality.) 

.< 'Dt Seiss’ How the Grinch Stole 
Christmas' 

This is one overstuffed movie, 


but it’s by nd means a turkey. 
The film’s frenetic attempts to 
create a full-length feature film 
out of a lender, albeit beloved, 
1957 children’s book can be 
exhausting, however, the lively 
and amiable spirit of the endeav- 
or converts pur inner Curmud- 
geon just as the spirit of 
Christmas eventually overpow- 
, ered that larcenous Grinch. 
Making that stretch possible is 
Ron Howard’s balanced direc- 
tion, a cheerful and inviting look 
guided by production designer 
Michael Corenblith and visual 
effects supervisor Kevin Mack, 
Jeffrey Price . & Peter S. 
Seaman’s clever script ideas 
and, in a part he seems almost ' ' 
, predestined to play, Jim Carrey 
as the Grinch. (1:42. PG, for ' 
some crude humor.) 


'The Ingend of Vance’ - 

A highly polished genteel fanta- 
• sy about the game of golf andJts 
relation to, yes, the game of Uft~ 
this Robert Redford-dirtwed iBlm- • 
is so earnest in its storytelling Jt 
negates a charismatic perfor- * 
mance by WIl Smith and eiufe'up 
both physically and spiritually\iir- 
brushed. (2:07. PG-13, for sttoe 
sexual content) 

‘Men of Honor* 

The life of Carl Brashaar, the 
first black I^avy diver, has been 
turned into socially critical '^p 
mythology at its most potent You 
may be left wondering What. 
Brashear’s real life was t«illy like, ' 
but this is nonetheless a rousing 

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-:r>; It may be a record; In first- 
cft.ime writer-director Valerie 
;f^reiraan*s “Love and Sex," 
there’s a Viagra joke before the 
opening credits have finished 
rolling. Thai’s really all you 
need to know. 

Surprisingly unfunny and 
, ;«caonably derivative, the movie 
to pass itself off as a hip 
,;-'take on romantic comedy, but 
Ifi.ends up making Nora Ephron 
. .,:look like Quentin Tarantino, 
“..yoice-over aphorisms like “Love 
is a minefield; you take one 
'C«ep. get blown to pieces, put 
yourself back together, then 
■.^take another step ..." will 
I^fljake you want to cover your 
^^fars and scream. 

The fihn stars the charismatic 


'A' Outatandlng 
■ Worthy effort 
T.So-to 
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ijMovies. 

pjfefrtlnood from C2 


Jubua aldwrti tiT i ti- i .. _i 

Doc 8: Gone tri 60 S^nds, Nutty Protesaor a 

' ‘ ^ • ' • e“mc£:KrTrnr»inp« p« >oaooeCTy | 

Famke Janssen as Kate, a maga- tionship history and borrow< ii< 
zine writer with a farcical rela- structure - among many whe? 


In the midst of a personal cri- 
sis, Kate looks back at her 
romantic past, starting on the 
playground and focusing on her 
sccond-to-last boyfriend, Adam 
(John Favreau), who may or 
may not have been the one. 

The action is episodic and 
contrived: The lovable things 
Adam does arc a little too lov- 
able, the irritating ones a little 
too irritating. 

Thou^ it strains to be edgy, 
which" the filmmakers. seem to 
equate with being crude, it 
couldn't be much more conven- 
tional. Contains sexual situa- 
tions and partial nudity 

Rated R. 

‘The Repiacements' 

* Following in the tradition of 
every underdog drama from 
**Thc Seven Samurai" to “The 
Mighty Ducks," “The 


Replacements" tracks the for- 

-lunes-of-a-ragtag-bunrirorpFo' 

football wannabes who agree to 
step in and play when the regu- 
lar team go on strike. 

- This movie is based on rhe 
1987 NFL players strike and the 
real replacement Redskins who 
won a streak of games, taking 

the team into the playoffs. 

“The Replacements" begins 
by highlighting the clownish- 
ness of the scabs, led by_QB 
Shane Falco (Keanu Reeves), 
saving their heroics for the final 


tlown._T liere!s,aJove_yinryfiu[, 

plot involving Shane and a pret-* 
ty cheerleader (Brooke 
Langton). but the real meat is 
on the field. Its message of 
teamwork, rah rali and Iwy-gets- 
girl manages to pui,a few points 
on the scoreboard of old-fash- 
ioned values, but ultimately 
that’s a field goal, not a touch- 
down. 

Contains profanity, football 
violence, a barroom brawl and 
iewcj cheerleading. 

Rated PC-13. 


•.i^eer-the-superhero, hiss-the- 
-^pervillain entertainment, with 
v*^ba.Gooding-Jr.’s Brashear pit^- 
^-tM against Robert De Niro, a fic- 
t-Qonalized composite of all the 
t-*lj®cists Brashear endured alone 
way. The trouble is that the 
.^picture winds up almost as much 
Ntjie story of the fictional charaaer 
• : -as it is an actual hero. With 
;-Charlize Theron and Aunjanue 

• CEUis. (Z"08. R for language.) 

Dalmatians" 

^^Diehard fans of '101 
v-D^arians’ may be pleased by 
, * • this sequel, which is actuafly mare 
^r^ridng of the 1996 release, 
Glenn Close's ferocious 
, -Guella De 'Wlup to her old tricks, 
.;eagcr as ever, despite temporary 

• rriorm, to create a. cloak made of 
the sldns of Dalmatian puDoie.s 

• Gerard T)eparcUeu~irR» aide d^ 


-Ihe fikrlookrgreal but plays flat," 
with te^noJogy overwhelming 
routine plotti ng and characteriza- 
“tion,“resulting m a space adven- 
ture short on thrills. (1:47. PG-13 
for sd-fi violence, brief nudity and 
language.) 


veision of ’^d Girls.’ (1:20. G.) 
JTta.ettDayL. 


• camp (in all senses of the word), 
with loan Gruffudd and Alice 
I ►jV^.pnividingthelove'inierest 
I ^3- ' tooinly a fancy turkey 
is serving for 
I ‘ZjanJcseivmg, with some $c^ 

I . t«®i®nce that strain its G-raiing 
I :;fl!40.G.) 

• n Ti ^ Spacey, 

*.■> Helen Hunt and the remarkable' 
Hiuey Joel Oanem and restrained 
. •:_wniing and direction (from Leslie 
»|Djxon andMimi Leder) win us 
t*Vcr, much against our better 
^.Jud^ent, to this sentimental, 
uisi^tional fantasy about the dif- 

• -./iculty and the rewards of doing 

* ^ood in an uncaring world. (102. 
* -for mature thematic ele- 

i^citiding substance 
j rebuse^reooyery, some sexual situa- 

• tions, Janguage and brief vio<. 

.^ce.) 

. Planet’ 

— I; — Red-Planct-Val'Kilraerand^ 
Came-Aiuie.Moss are on a cata- 
strophe-plagued mission to Mars, 
where algae is harvested to create 
►; oxygen to make the planet habit- 
“r:abIeasEarth'JiesfroinTibUunoa 


‘Remembef the Titans' 

Producer Jerry Bruckheimer in 
a serious mood is still Jerry 
Bruckheimer. An earnest look, 
based on a true story, at how two 
football coaches, one black, one 
whit^ brought racial harmony to 
a divided community, all old with 
the usual energy, shrwdness, and 
ability to reduce things to the sim- 
plest terras. (1:51. PG. for themat- 
ic elements and some language.) 

‘RugraU In Paris -The Movie’ 

_ Tlus sequel to t he 1998 h it feels 
like aTialf-hour TV“show inflated 
into a fea^ film. About half the 
running time is spent setting up 
why the Rugrats and their fami- 
Ires are in Paris, how they got 
there, and who the new characters 
are. For all the machinations and 
^eme-park attractions, the plot 
doesn't covv much ground. All is 
nearly forgiven, however, for' the" 
short but memorable scene of 
Sumo wrestlers singing a karaoke 


Hollywood, which has been 
clorung action-adventure movies 
for years, has gotten around to 
'uaking an action-adventure movie 
about cloning and who does it 
star. Arnold Schwarzenegger. 
Twice. From it’s standard-issue 
acD^on to us half4iearted dialogue 
and acting, that’s one situation 
even two Schwantene^ers aren’t 
enough to solve. (2.-04. PC-13, for 
pzing action violence, brief strong 
language and some sensuality.) 

‘Unbreakable' 

It's unreasonable and unfair to , 
expect any film to have the special 
impact *1116 Sixth Sense* had on 
audiences, but M. Night - 
anyMalan (who wrote, dii^ed 
-pmduced-both-filmsy-has-fecyded- 
so many of the same elements 
nere that ho seems to be inviting 
comparisons. TTie real problem S 
the stonr line, which starts out 
unplauabie and gets increaringly 
F®™ ™ficult to take seriously as 
It unfolds. It’s a comic-iiook idea in 
me worst sense. Bruce Willis, 
Jackson and Robin 
Wnght-Ppi star. (1:47. PG-13.-for' 
mature themes, some disturbing 
violent content and a sexual ref^ 
encc.) 



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- Style, Price, Quality 
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5475 US HWY 93 • JEROME. IDAHO ' 
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festival of Irees^^ 

Uisthtoe.Madfi'SSS 

The Magic Valley Regional Medical Center Foundation 

g Of|uig llyjnyjteg^)^jto_rinq in_the..holiday-Season at-the- 

Festival-of-T " ~ 



■estival-of-Trees^OOCr 

Saturday, Oecember 9, 2000 
241 Main Avenue West 
Downtown, Twin Falls 

8:30 PM to 11:30 PM 
Enjoy music by the Bob Nora Band 

Light Snacks 
No Host Cocktails 

$15.00 per person 

For additional information call 737-2481 

Proceeds benefit the Magic Valley Heart Fund arid 
Area Quick Response Units 


Second CSI Equine 
Nutritional Symposium 


You ar e inv it ed to attend a c om plimentary 
nutritionad seminar at the . 


- esi ExpotJemeTTTwirTFalls 
^ December 2, 2000 

9:30 am - 1 :00 pm 

Tdpicstl 

: ‘ ^3^'^ See May Be Hurting' Your Horse. 

LUpd^ on Equine Strangles Vaccine 

.eMntert»„Ypur Horse - Manageirient and Feed Changes for Winter 


, Speakers: 

br. Pat Pence, DVM, Fort Dodge Co. 
Dr. Margaret Wlnsrys, PhD, Purina Mills 

For more information call: 



Brought to you by CSI and 
ydur local Purina Gold dealerships. 







Valley Co-ops, with - 
5. convenient lobations: 
Buhl 208-543-^6 
Jerome 208-324-2399 
Wendell 208-536-^61 
Gooding 208-934^^ 

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farm CITY 
animal supply INC 

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50 people to register at the ^ 
—^Jtetplnar will receive a coupon for a- 
■ bag of Purina HorsePeed, 

these Purina dealeishipsr:- 



Jiestivalo£Xre&s retoms 


'nyiN FALLS - Tile Festival of 
— ^Frees-reutms-dtnvntown for the 
first time In seven years when 
the iMiniial. Maj-ic Valley 
Reftinnal Medical Center 
fundraisinjt event opens 
Wednesday. 

- The old Calvary Chapel build- 
• irift at 211 Main Ave. E. will be 
the site of the event. Ltisi years 
festival,], held at the old 
Wareinari‘hiiildinf> on Kimberly 
Road, attracted 10,000 people 
and raised 565,000. . . . 


This-ycar the-proceeds-go-to-- 

thc Valley Heart Fund and area 
quick-re.sponse unlt.s. 

It opens Wednesday night with 
the traditional gala, at which 
trees and decorations are sold by 
silent auction. The event starts at 
7 p.m., with a live auction at 8. 
Tickm.s, which-are S30 per per- 
■'son, arc available by phoning 
737-2481. Complimentary hors 
d'otievres and wine will be avail- 
able. , 

The pulilic display of the trijes 
and seasonal finery starts on 
Thursday and runs through Dec. 


-lO.-Hours are 10 a.tn.-10 pan. on 
Thursday and Dec. 8, 10 a.m. to 
8:30 p.m. on Dec.' 9.ahd froin'll_ 
a.m. to 5 p.m. on Dec. 10. -Tickets 
are $3. for units, $2 for seniors 
and SI for children under 12. 

The foundation will also spon- 
sor a Senior Tea on Thursday 
Jind a Mistletoe Madness Dance 
on Dec..9, with music by Bob 
Nora. Tickets are SIS per person.' 

Bretikfasi with Santa will also 
be Dec. 9 at 8:30 pirn. Thc SlO 
ticket price includes breakfast. 

For further information, call 
-737-2481 or 737-2480. 


‘Site Extraction’ comes to Herrett ; 
Centei^reception honpre 

_ The T1mes-Wow» Thompson is a painter, orint. c*:.* X 7 ..._r.r 


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the World" by Tim LaHaye, 

Jerry B. Jetikin.s (Tyndale) (F-H) “"'inter’s Hear 

,6. "Harry .Potter and the Robert Jordan (Tor) (F-H) 


TWIN FALLS - The art show 
coming Tuesday to the Jean B. 
King Gallery at the Herrett 
Center on the College of 
. Southern Idaho catiipus may 
indeed separate those who love 
to ponder art from those who 
glance quickly and walk away. 

Based on the reviews of West 
Coast art critics and writers, the 
Herrett Center is fortunate to 
have James B. Thompson’s 
works, which will be on display 
until Jan. 27. CSI an professor 
Ru.sscll Hepworth, who is orga- 
nizing the show, says 
Thompson’s work is fresh and 
cxcitiftgr Though It may not 
seem obvious at first. Hepwonh 


^11 O’Reilly (B roadwa y) (NT H) (E-II). 

' 13. 'Tfow the Grinch Stole 24.' 

^ Christmas!" by Dr. Seiiss hyToi 

(Random Hoti.se) (F-H) . 25. 

„ 14. "Left Behind" by Tim Dece| 

) LaHayc with, Jerry B. Jenkins (St. M 

(Living Books/Tyndale House) 26. 
J, Queen 

:j IS. “Winter’s Heart" by (Pocki 


Cniilci it( Fire” by J. K. Rtiwling; 
Illiistratetl hy Mary Cramlpre 
(Scliolaslie/Arthiir A. Levine) (F- 
il) 

7. "Harry Potter and the 
I’risoner of Azkahan" liy J.K. 
Rowling; Illustrated hv Mary 
CramlPre (Artimr A. 
Levine/Scliolasiic) (F-Il) 

8. "Who Moved My'dieese?: 
An Amazing Wjiy to’ Deal with 

— Cluuigu4t>-S’-otii'-VVt>rlennd~rn~ 
Vnur Life" hy Spencer Jolmson 


16. "The Stani.sliiski Brothers" 
hy Nora Rohert.s (Silhouette)iF- 
P) _ 

17. “The Last Precinct” liy 
I'atricia Cornwell (Putnam)-(F- 

18. “The Lion’s Game" by 
Nelson UeMille (Warner) (F-P) 

19. “Abduction” liy Roliin 
Cook (Berkley) (F-P) 

20. “Irresistible Forces" hv 
■DanlB!le"Sieel (Dell) (F-P) 

21. “Deck the Halls" by Maty 


Higgins Clark. Carol Higgins 
Clark (Simon Sc 

Schuster/Scribiier) (F-H) 

22. “The Dark Side of liie 
Liglu Ciiascrs:' Reclaiming Your 
Power. Creativity. Brilliance, and 
Dreams" by Debbie FonI, Neale 
Donald Walsch, Jeremiah 
Abrams (Riverhead) (NF-P) 

23. “Drowning Riitli” by 
Christina Schwarz (Dotibicdav) 

_(E-1I) 

24. “The Bear and the Dragon" 
hy T<»m Clancy (Putnam) (F-H) 

25. "The Prometheus 
Deception" by Robert Ludliim 
(St. Martin’s) (F-H) 

26. "Talking Dirty With the 

Queen of Clean" by Linda Cobb 
(Pocket )(NF-P) 

27. “If You Take a Mouse to 
the Movies" by Laura Numcroff; 
an by l-clicia Bond (Laura 
Gcnnger/HarpcrCollins) (F-U) 

28. “Joiirney" by Danielle 
Steel (DeLneone Pre«) (F-H) 

29. “A Short Guiduto a Happy 
Life" hy Anna Quindlen 
(Raiuioin House) (NF-H) 

30. "Tom Clancy’s Power Plays 
Bio-Strike" l>y Created by Tom 

_Qi>ncyjyiatLiii_Crecnberg:.ivrit* 

ten hy Jerome ITelslcr (Berkley) 
^I■■•P) 


..w,-... .usi. nepwonn ms arts begins to take on 

says a graal deal o( study and . abstract (orms filled with tangles 
history are built into oMlnes and odd ...=11 


history are built into 
Thompson’s intaglio prints. 


Thompson is a painter, print- 
maker and a professor of art at 
Willamette Umversity in Salem, 
Ore. Each of his three endeavors 
is apparent in his art. When he 
paints, he blends the colors with 
his finger, a rag or brush. He 
often dabs, wijies or smears 
paint with the flat of his hand, 
concentrating on where each 
color should go. This technique, 
for most of us, would undoubted- 
ly result in a muddy gray. But 
Thompson is able to coax 
v^rant, seemingly impossible 
shades of color from the mix. 

He adds the figures that com- 
bine his admiration of classical 
artists with his own interest in 
landscape and older dwellings. 
His arts begins to take on 


7:, tiuKu niui lujigKM 

of Tines and odd, small images of 
people, animals and things. 


Hepworth said the Herretf 
show title “Site Extraction” is 
his own play on the artistic 
• words “sight abstraction^-*) 
“Site," referring to a location of 
study, is an intentional rais» 
spelling of ’sight,’ which is the 
first step in abstracting! 
“Extraction" is the second key. 
step in abstract art. 

Thompson will be at the CSI 
art complex for a guest lecture 
Tuesday afternoon. He will be 
honored with an artist’s recep- 
tion from 7-9 p.m. Tuc^ay in the 
Jean B. King’Gallery. Admission' 
is free. The Herrett Centers’ 
hours are 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.mr- 
Tuesdays and Fridays, 9J0 aS. : 
to 4:30 p.m. Wednesdays and 
Thursdays, and 1-9 p.m., 
Saturdays. For more informa* 
tion, call 733-9554, ExL 2655. > 


^ u.uti.uto diiu inings. uon, can txL 2655. > 

Celebrate moods of Christebas with son# 


TWIN FALLS - The Magic 
Valley Chorale will sponsor its 
annual Chrisem^ concert, "The 
Many_Moods-of-Christmas,’:- 


Saturday and Sunday at the 
College of Southern Idaho Fine 
Arts Center auditorium. 

Shows are scheduled for 8 p.m. 
on Saturday and 3 p.m. Sunday. 

^Tickets, which are 55 forgener= — 


al admission and $3 for students, 
and seniors, are available ar 
. Welch Music, the CSI B<?okstore' 
and Everybody’s Business in- 
Twin Falls and at Arlene’s 
Flowers'in Jerome. 


Oakley Valley Arts Couneil continues ‘Nunsense’ 


TWIN FALLS - The Oakley 
Valley Arts Council will follow up 
its recent production of 
“Nunsense II” with yet more 
“Nunsense.” 

“Nuncrackers: The Christmas 
Mu,sical” - the fourth installmem 
in Dan Goggin’s popular .series - 
will be presented Thursday 
^rough Dec. 16. at Howells 
Opera House. Curtain time is 7 
p/m. 


“Nuncrackers” is the annual' 
Christmas program put on by the 
. mythical Mount St. Helen’s con- 
vent in New Jersey, and the first 
TV special taped by the Convent 
Cable Access TV Studio with 
prize money that Sister Mary 
Paul won earlier. 

The shbiv is full of mirth and 
music, traditional Christmas car- 
ols, Christmas carol spoofs, 
“Nunsense" humor and Sugar 
Plum Fairies. 

Judy Barnes will play The 


Reverend Mother, Carol 
Anderson is Sister Maiy Hubert, 
Tia Mullins is cast as Sister Maty 
Paul, Penne Main May is Sister 
Robert Anne, Kaztiko Mittoh is 
Sister Leo and Denny Davis will 
play Father Virgil. t 

“Nuncrackers" is directed by' 
Harlo Clark. Rachel Dillon and 
Janna Exon arc accompanists. 

Tickets, which are $8, can be 
reserved by phoning 677-2787. 
Tickets are sold by reservations 
only. 


Check out High 5 in albums, television 


Scott Glenn s ‘VerticarLiniif to open in Sun Valley 

Th« .... •' 


The Associated Press 


1. •‘KR,"NBC. > 

2. "Nl-'L Monday Night 
Football: Washington at St. 
Louis." ABC. 

■; JT^’-'Every body ' LbV«i7 Ray.^ 
mond."CBS, 

4. .‘!Who Wtims to Ik- ti 

MiIihmairt.-Tiit-sdiiy.” ABC, 

. -SV "Who Wtims to Ik a 
Mllliotiiiict.-Simdiiy,"AHC. 

(From .■^Helswiv .\k-dia 
■ Rusuiirdi) 

Hot Rve - 

1, "Imlepemlt-m-Wnman Pan 
I." Destiny's Child. Cohimliia, 

2, "Case uf die F.v (Watcha 
Gotma Do)." .Mvii. University. 

^.Tr“*Wtrh-WrniT^\T(irOp:ni:'’“ 


•Creed. Wind-up. 

• 4. "Kryptoniie," 3 Doors Down. 

■ Republic. 

S, "This I Promise You," 'N 
Sync. Jive. 

(From Billboard magazine) 

Albums 

1, "1," The Beatle.s, Apple. 

2. “Now 5,” Various Artist.s. 
Sony/Zoml)a/Universal/EMI. 

.3, “Lovers Rock," Sade. Epic. 

4, "Sound Loaded," Ricky 
Martin, Columbia, 

5. “Tp-2.Com," R, Kelly. Jive. 
(From Billlionrd magazine) 

Hot country singles * 

1, "We Danced." Brad Paisley, 
Arista Naslivillc, 

2. “ Mv.Next.'niiriy .Vi-.-irs^" Tim 

McGraw, Curb. 


3. “Just Another Day In 

l*.'irudisc.!LEhil_Vas$ar.-Arj.sta- 
Ntishville. 

4. “Without You,” Dixie 
Chick-s. Monument. 

5. “Best Of Intemioms," Travis 
Tritt. Columbia. 

(From Broadcast Data 
Systems) 

Top country albums 

1. “Greatest Hitsi’' Tim 
McGraw. Curb. 

2. “Breathe." Faith Hill. 

Warner Bros. {Platihiim) ' 

3. “Fly," Dixie Clilck.s. 
Motuimem. (Platinum) 

4. “Wheii_Somebodv Loves 
You.” Alan Jackson.' Arista ’ 
Nti-sliville. 

5. “One- Voice.” Billy Gilman. 

_Lpic^(J!h'hnum) 

(FromSoundScaii) 


The Tlme»New8 

KETCHUM - Actor Scott 
Glenn, a Sun Valley resident, 
will stage the premiere of his 
new action-adventure climbing 
-movie— Vertical Limit’' hcre to 


raise funds for Blaine County 
Scorch and Rescue. 

The movie will be shown in. 
Ketchum on Wednesday - two 
days before it opens clscwhc. i. 

Showtimes are 7 and 9:15 p.m. 
at the Magic Lantern Cinema, 


Admission is $20 in advantio 
through Video Depot in Hailey 
and Ketchum. 

A movie party afterwards at 
The Roosevelt Tavern will cost 
55 with a movie ticket stub. 


Carol 


* Continued from Cl 
ul theaiLT ihiii uses a minimal 
^ct ami Kistmiic pieces and 
relies on old i .ulio sound effects. 
Mich as coconut shells to create 
ihe sonml of lioofbeais. It asks 
.imiience iin-riibers to use llicir 
imagiiialiori. to susi>eiul disiie- 
lii'f timl livi- in ilu- inomenl tliai 
ihf iicior.s .ire irciiling, 

eery simiiR-. loving 

Idling of (lie siory," Clenn said. 
"The heart of iliis «jnf shines 
llinmgli." 

"It becomes a siiared gift 
between the actors and audi- 
ence," added Simone. “We’re 
saying, 'Will you come with us 
on this journey?’"_ 

Wood River Valley carpenter- 
ihespian Chad Smith will por- 


tray Scrooge - a role already 
played hy coiinile.ss others, 
iiichiding the Muppets and Mr. 
Magoo. 

"It's made me realize that a lot" 
of the'liltie areas in our lives are 
really defense mechanisms," Ije 
said. "Scrooge was hurt by 
things in his ymiih. He’s lost tii.s- 

conipa.ssion. for instaru-i- ■iti fl 

nosv he’s got to regain it." 

Every actor hut Scrooge plays 
three characiei .. Simone, who 
played Tracy Lord In "The 
Philadelphi:i Story," will meta- 
morphose from tile storyteller 
who opens the play to tiiJ Ghost 
of Christmas Past to Mrs. 
Cratchic with the donning of a 
red cape and the turning of (lie 
cape into an apron. 


'Tni a big kid at heart and this 
is iny chance to play, to pre- 
tend," she said. 

"Royal Shakespeare Company 
did something similar ivith 
"Nicholas NickJeby” and it likr- 
ally felt like we were turning the 
fiages of a Ijook as we watched 
the play unfold." 

Emu.Sofcttand-.NaMs-Theob«ld— 

share the roles of the little boy. 
Tiny Tim and Mrs. Fczziwig. 
Nick Harman plays Bob 
Cratchit, among others; Devin 
Kearms, Belle; Robias Wilson, 
Christmas Present, and R.L. 
Rowscy and Russell Simone 
Wilson, musicians. 

The play is sponsored by 
hilly’s Coffee, Viking Compon- 
ents tmd The Papoose Club. 



PARK SLEEP AND FLY 
PACKAGE 



Stay &Sl<iattfie ‘WorCd 
Jamous Sun Va[[ey ‘Rfsarti 


From now until December 16, 2000, enjoyi night lodging 
and a 1 day lift ticket at the Sun Valley Resort starting at 

5 7 per person; do.uble^occupancy. You may extend this 
package for as many nights as you would like until 
■ December 16, pending availability. 

^ FOR MORE INFORAAATION OR RESERVATIONS CALL 

1-800-786-8259 'A 

Sun Valley Resort-^Sun Valley, Idaho ' 

. www.sunvalley.com - 

LV, IL/i n\ ! I f .\ J m ^ 





-Tmlght 

• The ninth annual downtown 
Twin Falls Festival of Lights 
Parade starts at 6:30 p.m. at 
Magic Valley High School in 
downtown Twin Falls, travels 
throughout downtown and Old 
Towne, and ends at the alterna- 
tive school. Downtown and Old 
Towne merchants will be open 
before and after the parade. 

Tonl^ 

"Michael McLean’s “Forgotten 
Carols” will 
perform at the 
King Fine Arts 
Center in 
Burley at 7:30 
p.m. Tickets, 
which are SIO, ' 
arc available at 
Bell’s Family 
B 0 q k s 
Everybody’s 
Business and ‘ 
Michael McLean Crowley’s 
Quad/Magic 
Valley Mall in Twin Palls, at 
Rosebud Florist in Jerome, at the 
Book Plaza in Burley and at The 
. Book Store in Rupert. Tickets 
wilLbesold at the door for S12. 

Tonight - Boise 

The Boston Pops Holiday 
Concen will be held at 8 pjn. at 
the Boise State University 
Pavilion. Tickets, which are $15, 
$25, $35, $50, $75 and $100 for 
tables, can be reserved by phon- 
ing Select A Seat at (208) 426- 
1171. 

Tonight, Saturday and Sunday 
^The Hailey Festival of Trees 
win be held from noon to 9 p.m. 
today, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday 
^and 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday at 
the National Guard Armory, 701 
Fourth Ave. S., Hailey. 
Admission to the festival is $3 
for adults and-S2. for children. 
The Children’.s Holiday 
Wonderland will be Held from 
9:30 ajn. to 3:30 p.m. Saturday at 
the Blaine County Senior 
Center. 721 Third Ave. S., 
Hailey. Admission to the holiday 
wonderland, which includes tick- 
ets to the arniory, is $3 for adults 
and $2 for adults, 

$8turday - Boise 

'Kurt Bestor will present a 
Christmas concen at 8 p.m. in the 
Ii^orrison Center on the compui. 

<a Boise State University. Tickets, 
^ch arc $10, $15 and $25, can 
Be reserved by phoning Select A 
Seat at (208) 426-1766. 

^turday and Sunday 
The Magic Valley Chorale will 
present “The Many Moods of 
Christmas," 8 p.m. on Dec. 2 and 
_3.p.m.-on-Dec.-3,-CoIlegeof- 
Southern Idaho Fine Arts 
Center, Twin Falls. Tickets, 

3 hich are. $5 for general admis- 

on-and-S3-for-seniors-andstu- — 
dents, are available at Welch’s 
Music, Everybody’s Business and 
the CSl, Bookstore in Twin Falls, 
at Arlene’s. Flowers in.Jcrome, 
from any chorale member, or at 
the door. 

Sunday and Monday 
The Oakley Valley Arts 
Council will sponsor its annual 
Christmas Concert^bt 8 p.m. 
nightly in HowcILs Opera House 
id Oakley. Free. 

_Wedneaday.lhrough 0ec..l0 

.Thu Magic Valley Regional 
Medical Center Foundation will 
sponsor its Festival of Trees in 
the old Calvary Chapel building, 

241 Main Ave. E., Twin Falls. 

The opening-night gala is sched- 
uled for Dec 6 at 7 p.m. Tickets 
are $15 per person. Trees and 
hpliday decorations will be 
exhibited froni 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. 

Itec. 7-8, from 10 a.m.-8 p.m. on 
— Efecr-9-and-from-ll-a;m?6-p:m— 


^,1 


v-Pee7-10r-Ticket s ar cS 3 I 


adults, $2 for seniors and $1 for 
children under 12. - 

,;p i. A. N E T A R I U M •: 

Today, Saturday, Tuesday 
j“Steamrolling Through the 
Holidays,” the Faulkner 
Planetarium’s holiday show, will 
continue through the end of the 
■yiar at the Herrett Center for 
Arts and Sciences on the campus 
of the College of Southern Idaho 
iri Twin Falls. “Sieainrolling" is 
a soundtrack of Christmas time 
favorites by the popular instru- 
. mental -group Mannheim 
Steamroller The program will 
b6, shown at7 p^m;T’nesdays and " 
■ Fridays. and 4 and 7 p.m. on 
SjiturdaysrAdrhission is $4 for 
. adults, $3 for seniors, $2 for chil- . . 
dren or $9 for families. For more ‘ 
iiiforraation, call'the Hcrrett 
Center at 733-9554, Ext. 2655. 



Cover- charge for the 11 p.mr 
cocktail show is $7.50 on week- 
nights and Sunday and $7.50 on 
Saturday. For reservations and 
information, call (800) 821-1103. 


^arade kicks off season 


"Tonight 

G&R.Express will play rock 

and country from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. 
at Mr. Bill’s, 101 N. Alder, 
Jerome. No cover charge. 


Tonight and Saturday 

Paul Revere 
and the Raid- 



Paid Revere and 
the Raldera 



Tonight and Saturday 
The Tourists will play from 9 
p.m. to 1 a.m. at Muggers 
Brewpub, 516 Second St. S., 
Twin Falls. Cover charge is S3. 


Tonlgl^and Saturday^ 

Cobalt Blue will play from 9 
p.m. to 1 a.m. at The Oa.si.s, 1007 

Please sec EVENTS. Page C6 


1 Season Online Sponsor 


This Friday & Saturday Special 
8, 10 & 14 oz Prime Rib 

«'r5BREflKFflS7 c',iLUNCH <-AdO(NN£R 
(^APPETIZERS (&LOUNCE 
(^BEER. WINE. SPIRITS 


220 West Main 
Jerome. Idaho 
324-5825 


Tuevb).-niuf>dj) 7am.|0pm - Pf.djv-SAlu.Jjv 7im-llpin ■ .SunJjs 7. 


Life Insurance • Annuities ♦ Financial Services • IRAs 


LIFE * savings! 

Dale Ewersan 


P.O. Box 24 - Bellevue, ID 83318 - 208-788-0148 
E-Mail us - wvw.hollerm.iuslerm.neiy 


[^The Ti nies-Ngtvs 


j/Parits & Recreation , 

736-226S or 736-2266 

CALL TODAY! 

Boys BaskettaU Registration 

M Now through December 2nd 
Grades 4-7 

Rvuhtrmioh a/itr Decemher 2, 
late fees will be ailJnl 

ADULT 
BASKETBALL 

■ For teams wishing lo participate in the 
. "nvln Falls leagues this winter. 

Team feefand rosier arc due IX-ccmber 8, 

HBYr KIDS! 

Itis the season crafts 

1 dropthekIdsoff 

WHIUEYOUSHOPI 
Mist through sixth grades arp Invltod 
to participate in this Saturday of holiday crafts. 

CREATE PROJECTS OR GIFTS 

Saturday Dec. 9, 9 am-nw)s 
S 12 in city llmlis, SIS outside city limits ' 
Parks & Recreation Office • 136 Maxwell Ave. 

HOLIDAY 

WREATH^ 
MAKING 

•A 

■ le a rn the tricks of the trade. 
Make a beautiful WTcath. 
Saturday, Dec. 2, 9;00A.M-Nbo,M 
Co-sponsofcd by 'F.veiy Blooming Tiling" 
Class fee S33.00 includes instruction 
" and basic supplies: Teens lo a"duIts."G7/f 

SENIOR CRAFTS 

Chris Miller will he leading craft 
projects on tlie fir.« and third " 

Tuesday of each month. 

Dec. 5, Dec; 19 

12:4.S-2;(X) I’m. 

I Cost-is-SJ.SO.per-vjslt.-Twln-Kallv.Seni()r — 

I Center, 616 Kastland Drive. 

{■or this or other I'oiks & Kirreolioii i>ro\;riiiu\ 
call 736-226S or 736-2266. 

SHOSHONE FALLS 
VIEWING AREA CLOSED 

The viewing area and the main parking lot 
at Shmhone Falls Park is closed due to the first . 
pliasc of the renovation pro)L-ct. 


f Police Dept. 

cormat/o/, 

cxie% 

Non-Emergency. Police Service 

735-HELP 

(7:is-4;w7j 

BY CALLING 735-HELP 

FROM 7."OOM*-e.-tlOpu DAILY 
IftOCUiF-edXlPU SATUFOAY & SUNDAY 

MHffiEBS OF OUR COMMUMTY CAN 
RECaVENONBUERGeiCYCnYSERVICES | 

( Animal control calls 
C C'ity event infomtaiion 
( Rejxirt crimes afieMhe fact 
( Report smpidousaLilvliic5 
t Tralfic problems 

•t Urgent water ujm-on and tum-olf 
< Water service prolilems 
( Sewer pmbicms 
t Any non-emergency request 
»vww.tfid.org i^)llce on-lliie nTxiriliix) 


' Employment 


POUCE OFFICER TESTING | 

BIUNGUAL APPUCANTS ONLY 

• lhixWir<Sivuihlii 

PlWrci'ftlfication not a'quin'd. 

Nosv aeuytliig jot).ip]tlic;ilionv 

-AIRPORT MANAGER — 

S3.3,i;i2toSHH20 
Now aavpting jol} ap})licuti(ins. 

.^WATER-OBERATOR- - 

Now aavpting job ,i[ip!ic;itiiinv 

i(»iM. t Ilk- /itviiiihf ( irtke Uiitnl in i .ift" l/.i//, • 

.121 2iul Awntk' i.jsl. 

fOf:,h\ ,t7)riic/>iv \Siwk I1.I.C. 


l/J 0 iie_D.epiartmcnt_ 


ir plai. 


TREE.TIP OF THE WEEK 

• Now Is a good lime to hire a certified 
arborist to prune your trees. 


Department] 


PROTCCT WATER PIPES 

With tlte cold weather we are starting Into, 
wo would like to remind the dtizons of our 
aimmunlty to leave a small trickle of water, 
atwut the size of the lead In a pencil, ninnlng 
thibugh the night or when leatdng hon^e for 


CHRISTMAS TREE SAFETY | 

* Make sure Ixive nl ChriMinas tn.v trunk 
Js kept in water 

* Never use c.lndie^ on yi: 
them near ymir lav 

* Kevp OuiMiius tav aw.iy from lie.il vniru- 
l.e. fireplacx^, wiHKllMirning stove\ etc. 

* Prevent tripping lia/ards by keeping 
c.xtension coals out ol [Xithways 

P — *_K4.v}U'l«ltrk'al-wirev< iuN>f-llK*-rwel*.ol — 
ytuingstcrs ^ 


Public Library 



. 736-227$ 735-7250 


I TWIN FALLS T’UBLIC LIBRARY | 

Information for Life 


www.fnagIcvalley.eom 


(.ill! or 7.I5-05I2 

, STOCKING STUFFERS 
I GIFTS FOR UNDER $30, 

• .Swim U-svins I 

• L.nu|xni itooks tor u']X'if Swimming 

• Aerobic ut.Lai) l’.i 




LIFEGUARDING CLASS 

American lied Cross certilied lilvguard 
course. Musi lx- l.S years old bv ilie ■ 
end of tile class, dmirse fiv is SI2li, 

Uass (x-gins on l XimiilxT 2?rarHiW 
I Iv lield during the Christnus lireak. If iniereMwl | 
please tall llie |XX)| lor the class schedule 


PARTY 

ATTHEPOOL 

DO SOMEIHING 

different... 

PLAN YOUR GROUP 
OR COMPANY HOUDAY 
Our pool accommodates 
up to 400 people'. 

.Activities like; kay.iking, .Sctilxi, Water lianies, 

, ilteme l’.irties, "S.’inia in Ha«v.iii" ami nu|di 
more, Nirge slivk,s|xice for eating and rela.ving, 
-• -/finv"niHr/xirft7i,"»r,,ricwif ' 

A ARTHRITISI FOUNDATION 
EXERCISE PROGRAM 

IK'signed for jnsiple living with .irihrilis in 

iis niany l orms,'T.niglit liv ,\'rthrliis ^ 

ITiumlation eertilietl instriiciufs, 

UM 1 \si, Moml.iys ilirough iluirsil,ivs 
l ee S.t.OO |X't class 


WOMENS' AEROBICS CLASS 

‘>•1(1 ui i>.7i'\i, 

MoiuLis lliMiigli iluirsd’.n 
S l.tx) per d.iss 
or/wi/htsc .;,/is.i-((7il,o7./ 

INNER TUBE WATER POLO 

.SevoiTd night .-l tim lun .utr.ii iinn 
— l^vnilK‘f-l-T-r\t!iiti>'-tnn-ri-S4‘*!ti'nt*rhL'tlnor" 
Tiring vniietriemls .iiul pl.iy tins lun. vsuling 
;.ime. Inner Itilv' ptosulal. i>-‘)i'\i. 

— rONIGHj ! — 


I Municipal Golf 
-CHECK-OUT^ 


-MIKE'S PRO SHOP 1 

At the' Twin lalls Niiin(clp;il ( iiiU t :our;e tor ' 
n iKime br, mil golt equipment 

25%OEF 

P' PRE-CHRISTMAS SALE | 

7 ^ HOLD YOUR HOUDAY PARTY 
AT THE CLUB HOUSE 

iiterivl me.ils, ituxi--i' itnni .i priu'. 
i.in -luomimKiaie up lo I .‘io, 

■till MikflliioiHin 

I SEASON PASSES MAKE GREAT GIFTSl 

' Ailllio ■ . . St'.S.lX) 

tuupli'v >.Sl)IN) In .t.U.lfn -ilh 

vniiiii . . .esixi III nl 

Mnioi uiupk -1 .4<imX) 

.•1 .Vliill N U'hiM 42.S.IXI ''"'-'FT p-m • 

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-to---- 

roll lime i:ollt>|.-. Sill, Iclil 12.5IX) sinr,,!,,vl 
■ • n Rouleiitx ol 1 1 *l,hlK.tul .2.1 IX) 

C.1I1 Mike Hamblin 7.1.1-3.126 


LAST TUESDAYS AT 7 PM 







FAJOiOAHaTRAmcaufc-; 


Weekend 


? Events 

j;^JJontlnued fro(7iC6 . . * . 

— Blue 1 jkes Blvd. N,, Twin Falls. ‘ 

Saturday 

— Milestono-afid-Hillie- Holman- 

\^ill perform from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. 
in Mr. Bill’s-lOl N—Aldcrr 
■ Jerome. No cover cliarge. 

Saturday - Pocatello 
Nothingface will play at 8 p.m. 
at Newberry’s, 150 N. Main in 
Old Town Pocatello. Tickets, 
which are S8 in advance or SIO 
the day of show, cTan be pur- 
cha.scd at Music Exchange in 
Twin Falls or reser\'cd by phon- 
ing (800) 9C5-1827. 

Wednesday - Pocatello 
Youth Dubliners iaH play at 7 
p.m. ni Newberry’s, 150 N. Main 
in Old Town Pocatello. Tickets, 
which are $10 in advance or $13 
.. tho day of show, can be pur- 
chased at Music Exchange in 
Twin Falls or rcsen’cd by phon- 
ing (800) 965-4827. 

Thursday 

Armageddon will play from 9 
{).m. to 1 a.m. at Honkef’s Place, 
121 Fourth Ave. S., Twin Falls. 
No cover charge. 

Dee. 11 -Boise 

Bloodhound Gang and 
Goldfinger will play at 7 p.m. at 
_ ■ t he Dou ble Tree Riverside Hotel. 
Doors open at £ p.m. Tickets, 

. which arc $20, can.be reseired 
. by phoning Select A Seat at (208) 
426-1766 or (800) 9G5-4827. 

C O U N T B V 

Tonight and Saturday ^ 

Renegade will play from 9 p.m. ' ' * 
*■ to I a.m. at Honker’s Place, 121 
Fourth Ave. S., Twin Falls. Cover 
charge is S3. 

^ Tonight and Saturday 
' Dave Avalos will play from 8:30 
_ p,m. to 12:30 a.m. in the Lantern 
- Lounge at Weston Plaza, 1350 
Blue Lakes Blvd. N., Twin Falls. 

Saturday”; 

Dusty and the Nomads will 
play from 8 p.m. to midnight at 
Spanbauer’s Barn on U.S. 

, Highway 93, oast of Jerome. 
Cover charge is $7. Call 324-7366. 

Tuesday , 

Country dance lessons will be 
given from 7-9 p.m. at Honker's 
Place, 121 Fourth Ave. S., Twin 
Falls. Le.s.sons are free. 

Tuesday 

Breakaway will play from 8:30 
p.m. to 12:30 a.m. in the Lantern 
Lounge at Weston Plaza, 1350 
Blue Lakes Blvd. N,, Twin Falls. ! 

Dec. 7-8 I 

Robert Earl Keen will play Salt 
Lake City's Zephyr Club at 10 
p.m. nightly. Tickets, which are 
S20, can be re.ser\’ed by phoning 

Smith’s Tijcat; (800) 888-TIXX, \ 

The Zephyr Club is located at 301, 
South West Temple. j 

Miscellaneous j 

f 

-Jonight 2 

Jan O lsen w ill pla y from 6i8 *■ 

~p:m. at Sa'xTiTfh Avenue, 2'13 
Fifth Ave, S., Twin Falls. 

Tonight 

Tile Echos will play from 8:30 
p.m. to 12:30 a.m. at George K’s 
Restaurant, 32.5 E. 3rd N., Burley. 


• Cover charge is $2. 

Tonight 

Bob Nora Band will play from 9 

n p.m. to -1-B.m— at— Sax Fifth - 

i. Avenue, 213 Fifth AveV S., Twin 

T- FaUs.- 

. Tonight and Saturday 

Desert Rain will play from 8:30 
p.rn. to 1 g.m. at Perk's Bar, 201 S. 

1 Alain Ave., Mackay. 

) Saturday 

Armageddon will play from 9 
t p.m. to 1 a.m. at Sax Fifth 
• Avenue, 213 Fifth Ave. S,, Twin 
. Falls. 

Saturday 

Randy Egner will play from 7 
I to 9 p.m. at Sax Fifth Avenue, 213 
Fifth Ave. S., Twin FalLs. 

Saturday 

Dynamite Entertainment will 
play at 9 p.m. at the 610 Club, 
1054 Overland Aye.. Burley. No 
cover charge. 

Sunday 

The Echos will play from 8 p.m. 
to midnight at Sax Fifth Avenue, 

213 Fifth Ave. S,, Twin Falls. 

Monday 

Jam session will be featured 
from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. at Sax Fifth 
Avcnue,-213 Fifth Ave. S.vTwln" 

. Fail.s. 

Tuesday 

Saxophonist Brian Blandford 
_ will play from 6 to 8 p.m. at Sax 
Fifth Avenue, 213 Fifth Ave. S., 
T^sin Falls. 

”i' Tuesday 

Milestone will play from 9 p.m. . 
to 1 a.m. at Sax Fifth Avenue, 213 ' 

Fifth Ave. S„ Twin Falls. -I 

• Wednesday 

A disc jockey \vill provide the 
music for ladies night from 8 p.m. 
to midnight at Honker’s Place, 

121. Fourth Ave. S., Twin Falls. 

No cover charge. 

Wednesday 

Guitarist David Santistevan- 
ivill play from 6 to 9 p.m. at Sax 
Fifth Avenue, 213 Fifth Ave. S., 

Twin Falls. 

Wednesday 

Bob Nora Band will play for 
ladies night from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. 
at Sax Fifth Avenue, 213 Fifth 
Ave. S., Twin Falls. 

Sunday -Boise _ 

The Boise State University 
Family Holiday Concert will be 
held at 7:30 p.m. in the Morrison 
Center on the campus of BSU. 
Tickets, wldch are $4 and S6, can 
be reserved by phoning Select A 
Seat at (208) 426-1766. 


■T h e ate r * • 

Wednesday through Dec. 9, 13-16 
:=-“rTlic College-of Southern Idaho 
Theater Department will present 
William Shakespeare’s 
“Hamlet," 8 p.m.. Room 119 of 
the Fine Am Center, Twin Falls. 
Tickets, which are S5 for general 
admission and S3 for students 
and senior citizens, may be pur- 
chased at the Fine Arts box offlcc 
between 1-4 p.m. Monday 
througli Friday or by calling 73^^ 
9554, Ext. 2625. Due to limited 
seating, reservations should be 
made early. 

Dec. 7-16 

The Oakley Valley Arts 
Council will present Dan 
Goggin’s "Nuncrackers: The 
Nunsense Christmas Musical,” 8 
•p.m. nightly, Howells Opera 
House, Oakley. Tickets, which 
arc $8, can be reserved by phon- 
ing 677-ARTS. Monday through 
Saturday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. 

ClASSICAlj^ 

Today and Saturday - Utah 
Violinist Vadim Guzman will 
perform ><ith tile Utah Symphony ' 
at 8 -p.m. in Salt Lake City's ' 
Abravkncl Hall. Tickets, which 
are 515, S20, $24, S31 and $3S. 
can Iw reserved by phoning (801) 
355-2787. AbravancI Hall is locat- 
ed at 123 West South Temple. 

Sunday and Monday - Utah 
A 3,000-voicc choir, including 
' the Utah Symphony Chorus, will 
perform HsndeFs “Messiah" at 7 
p.m. in Salt Lake City’s 
AbravancI Hall. Tickets,, which 
are $5 and $10, can be reserved ; 
• by phoning (801) 355-2787.' I 
AbravancI Hall is located at 123 I 



Wcfl South Temple. 

“Wedwadayand Thu^ ‘ 

Pocatello 

The Idaho State Civic_ 
Symphony, will perform with 
pianist Mark' Nciwirth at 8 pm. in 
the Goranson HoU on the campus 
of Idaho State University. Tickets 
arc $12 for adults and $5 for stu- 
dents. For more information on 
tickets, call (208) 254-3931. 

nease see 8 P 0 TU 0 HT, Page C 7 


TVs.Wn*s GKatniUoUn 
TV la r»tO. DUIr 7.» . ».(D 

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)M-)MWI).UM.l4}-)a-7.U-9.» 

L blwVHl CW77.00-91) , 

S.-S«1»-710-9U ^ 


WHY PAY MORE? ^ 

Discounted fabrics and sewing, 
needs foryour projects: -a 

MILL END FABRieS 

126 S. LncoLn*JERone, tOAHO ’• 

Opoi Mom-Sat 10 - 6 * 324-7204 



Framing 1 

ORDERS THROUGH DECEMBER S. 2000 '' 


wmmrnimmmmmm&rn 


Pfofesg'onal Frame S Canyonslde Gallery 733 - 329 ^f 


CARDS 


★ Trading Card ' 
Games 

★ Board Games 

^ ToUmaniGntS. . .including Mapc7C & Pokemon 

* Role-Playing Games... ■' 

including D & D andVampirc ^ 

OPEJV 2PM TO 12 .MlDNlGHT...EVERrDAri 
201 Sh oihoh, St. N. - 733-72S 1 


I Herrctt Center Hours | 
Tuts & Fri 9;30a(.i>9:00i>m 
W tD & TiiuR 9:30 am-4:30pm 
Sai I:00p,m-9:00pm 
C iostD Sunday & Monday 

Faulkner Planetarium 

LBJ.H-Q.lS_l_A.B_G_E.S T 

Slie^mroltins 
'Thrbush The 
Holidays! 

(EAIURING (Ht i.W»C OF 

Mannheim Sieamroller 
Thbough Dec. 22 
Tuesdays & Fridays 7 pm 
Thkhjgh Dk. 23 
Saiubdays 2 pm 

THE EXPLORERS 

Tuesday & Fbioat, 7 p».t 
Saturdays 2 pm, 4 Phi. 7 pm 


Wednesday 

Local musicians John Cugno, 
Brent Jensen, Gene Loranger and 
-Jes.se.Hadley-on-bass-will-pl,iy— 
Jazz Night from 7-10 p.m. on the 
first Wednesday of every month 
at Mugger’s Brewpub, 516 
Second St. S., Twin Falls. No 


L8NPH0USE 

THEfiTRE 



^ lor by the Idaho TravAt/Suicil 


— Tit RafM la rtrb Dti)r'7'45-9:4)— 
Sb- Sub iZ:)0. 1 to* ).il • 7.4] . 9.49 
Dbat?'! lU EakMlkMM 
DtUlr64).7:]0.9l0.9.4) 
Su.Sim' II:43.|2:W.2<0 -2:4) 
4:1) .‘)O0 -94].7:}0.9:I0.9:4) 


tUnambtrUMTIUH Dtlly 7:2) • 9:4] 
SU'Sua 12.4).):]0.7.2]-94) 

ll«w ThtCrlJKl Suit Ckrloni 

' D»il7 7.<O.T.4].9:20-9 ]] 

Su . Sub 12i». 12:43 . 2:|] . ) :00 
4 JO . ):|] • 7rO. 7.4] . 920 • 9.)) 


M<t« Tit PBtiau Dtllr TJ] ■ 9.4] 

- Su'Sinl24].)W.72].94] 

' UabrcBlublt Dulf 7:2] • 9 )) 

Su • Su . I2.-4] ■ }:J0 . 7:1] ■ 9.]) 
UtlkNcIgr Duly 7.4). 9)) 

Sj|. Sun I2:M- ) 00- ].l] • 7.4] . 9 ]} 
Dtun Vmaa Dtily 7.00 ■ 9.]0 
Sai-Sua l:00 - 400 - 7.eo-9:M 
Bobxb Otl)7 7.00-9.M 
Su • Sub I £0 • 4 CD ■ 7.00 • 9)0 
hrOForwwd Daly ?!00 • 9X) 
5«i-SuBlDO-4 00.7:00.9M M 


Rtom DtNk* Caba Cob^ 2r. 

Men Of Honor 

Sm.Sm 4:M-7:40-9:M 
^11 Stta 0.]Q Ctnu htow ].X) 9 n.~ 


j RADA CUTLERY 

I . “A Cut Above The Rest" C: 

I • Paring knives to W 

■ - hunting knives ' 

I • Includes kitchen utensils 

■ for all special chores 
I • American made 
H • Fine stainless steel 
H • Dishwasher safe 

EXCELLENT Paa 

...j ita mngslSmOi 

Wli LUMINARIES brthe HOLIDAYS^ 

Jj Decorate in traditional 5oMf/nvesfcrn style 
^ with glowing luminaries. 

Includes decorated sacks with yfS 

;. ■■"Vttfo extra large candles yw 

. Sold by SoroptimIst Internatlonal Of Twf it Falls- 

Proceeds will benefitVblunteenAgainstVIoJence 


Can anyTwt nfalbSoroptlmirt or 734 ^ 922 'or 734^6040 


^OjSG* Ijaho j 


ENJOY SPECIAL EVENTS, ACTIVITIES, & 

HOLIDAY RATES AT BOISE HOTEt-S 

:rir-2r-.*??-:HOLtDAY:SHOPPING-^^^^ 

Bazaars^ 

•X’ Humanitarian BOWL ■ 

GAME & events 
KICK-OPF. DEC. 28, 11:30 AM 

# HoUOAY LIGHTS TOURS 
Winter GARDEN aglow, 

\ DEC. 8-31; 

Q ' . IDAHO botanical GARDEN 

Is K •if- Skiing at bogus basin 
® ^ StEELHEADS HOCKEY 

# Stampede basketball 

# HoUDA'Y PERFORMANCES 

# Ice SKATING AT 
IDAHO ICE WORLD 

H First NIGHT CELEBRATION 

-Visit bo j 8 e.ora 

• or call the Boise CVB for ewnt info 
and a list of hotels offering holiday rates. 

“ " 800-635-5240 
~20r-34<F777r^= 


Buy an original Howard Sarvia Wood Carving, 
and donate to the 

Twin Falls Millennium Sculpture Project 

at t he same llmel 

Sculptures will be sold by silent auction 
Bidding closes on Decent' 'er 10 
See these wall-hung wood sc >tures at: 
Magic Valley Arts Council Gallery 
BabbeVs Cleaners 
Barnes & Noble 
The Bottega Gallery 
Cain’s Home Furnishings 
- Canyonslde Gallery 

Cavanaugh’s Best Western 

' ~ ~ :^^Cree/fs/</e-Sfeafr/7~ot/se 

First Security Bank . 

^ The Heirett Center 

Kimberly Nurseries - Every Bloomin’ Thing 
The Lamphouse Theatre 
Magic Valley Regional Medical Center 
The Metropolis 
Thejidtislc Center 
Mystic Pathways . 

Second Time Around Antiques 
Twin Falls Chamber of Commerce 
Twin Falls Clinic & Hospital 
Twin Falls Public Library 
The Uptown Bistro 

For Information Call 734-AR TS 


G^ba..„. 


in Cooperation 
With 


Presents... 


Monday, December 11, 2000 
7:J0 p.m. 

College of Southern Idaho 
Fine Arts Auditorium 

Celebrate the Season with 
■ this timeless classic... 

Performed by the 

Eugene Ballet Company 

Tickets Available At: 

CSI's Community Education Office, 
Magic Vaiiey Arts Councit, ' 
Everybody's Business, Crowiey's Soda 
fountains THe Homestead, The CSI - 
Oatreacb Centers in Gooding and Burley, 
Arlene's Flowers In jerome, 

Sav-Mor Dru g In Bu hl 

TIcl(ets...]1£ AdulU 
J7 Chlldren/Students ■ 

P!?M;j«|L733:9SSlj«t. 2288 

fortldcirlntonnatKinrlnaudlitg — 

, raervni lutlng. 




^rekEnd 

, Spotlight 

_:.;_cintino«dfrgwC6 : "I ; _ 

i D«c.l&^16-Utah 

! .T he Utah Ssmphony.will play a 

‘ I^o^am of holiday music at 8 
\pjn. In Abravanel HalL TiacetsT' 

— ^vdiich are $20, $25, S3rand $39. 

I can be reserved by phoiring (801) 
'>^55-2787, Abravaael Hall is locat* 
ed at 123 West South Temple. 

... 

. ^l^.30-(Aab 
j ■ The Utah Symphony vdll play a 
•program of waltzes, polkas and 
Jsongs by Johann Strauss, Franz 
^Lehar and other Viennese com- 
-posers, 8 pjn., in Salt Lake City’s 
Mbravanel Hall. Tickets, which 
Klare $16. $22 and $29. can hi» 


The Titnes-News: Your guide to living in 


';<are $16, $22 and $29, can be 
./reserved by phoning (801) 355- 
/ 2787. Abravanel Hall is located at 
' 123 West South Temple. 

<8n.M-Utoh ' 

The Utah Symphony will play 
' 0?“^ Weill’s Violin Concerto at 8 
1 *11.10. nightly in Salt Lake City’s 
I Abravanel halt dekets, which are 
} $15, $20, $24, $31 and $35, can be 
I reserved by phoning (801) 355- 

• 2787. Abravanel Hall is located at 
1 123 West South Temple. 

: Jan.U-Utah 

1 The Utah Symphony will per- 
I form Mozart’s Glklinor Symphony 
1 at 8 p.m. in Salt Lake City’s 
. Abravanel Hall. Tickets, which 
— — flre-$15,-$24 and $31, can be"' 
..^served by phoning (801) 355- 
tJ2787. Abravanel Hail is located at 
^123 West South Temple. 

.^onlght 

The Disabled American 
^Veterans Auxiliary will hold a 
;;dance at 8:30 p.m. at the DAV 
^KHall, 459 Shoup Ave., Twin Falls, 
j^rchie Turner will provide the 
, -music. 

ET-f 

(.♦Dec. 8-9, 13-17, 19-23, 2fr30 - 
I^Utah 

West will perform Peter 


l^choteographcdL-by— William — 
Christensen, in Salt Lake City’s 
(^pitol Theater. Performances 
<are scheduled for 7 pun. on Dec. 
i^8A 13-16, 19-23 and 26-30 and for 


Ij'p. Tickets, which range from 
$10-$55, can be reserved by 
jJjhoning (801) 3SS-2787. The 
iJ CapitoI, Theater is located at SO 


. Dec.9,11 . - 

__ Cenjcr_Smge Smdios of Dance— 
will present Peter Tdiaikowsky’s ta-i-m 
“T he Nutoackcr,” 2 pin. on Dec 
9 and 730 pjn. on Dec 11 in the Kroakt 
King Pihe Arts Center, Burley. 2/^®^ 
Tickets, which are $8, can be BIueRooi 
reserved by phoning 43&64S4. Nightly ex 

Dee 11 Karaok 

•in. »- „ pjn. to 1 

The Eugene, Ore., Ballet will 402 Main 
present Peter Tchaikowsky’s , 

“The Nutcracker,” 7:30 p.m., Saturday 
College of Southern Idaho Fine Kroake 
Arts Center auditorium. Twin frot 

■ Falls, featuring local dancers. BigKahui 
Tickets, which are $16 for adults 
and $7 for students and children, Sund« an 
are available-at Everybody’s FuflMt 
Business, The Homestead, play froi 
Crowley’s Old Time Sods Riverside 
Fountain, the Magic Valley Arts Buriey. 
Council office and the CSI 
Community Education Center 7, 

. office at Twin Falls, at Sav Mor [• ^ N 
Drug in Buhl, at Arlene’s Flowers [ * 

m Jerome, and at CSI Outreach I ■ 
Centers in Burley and Gooding. [• 

For more information, including t \ 

reserved seating, or for tickets. [• 

call 733-9554, Ext. 2288. [: 

K -M U s r c. I: 

Sunila ,-ljtali - 

• Martin Sexton will sing at Salt [; 

Lake City’s Zephyr Club at 10 f: /^ATF 

p.m. Tickets, which are SIS, can [: 

be reserved by phoning Smith’s ): r\*\i, 

Tix at (800) 888-TIXX. The UAN< 
Zephyr Club Js located at 301 , /-\i n 

South West Temple. | LOU I 

Dec.l2-Wah [■ 

SImwn Mullins will perform at [■ ^Twh 
Salt Lake City’s Zephyr Dub at f: ^ , 

10 p.m. Tickets, which are SIS I CjCti 
and $12, can be reserved by f 2dSlHfiia 
phoning (800) 888-TIXX. The f : 

Zephyr Club is located at 301 i O .. .. . ... 

I Ken Roy 

— — AJ'op-Produeer 

Through Top Service! 

Thinking Ab^t Buying Or Selling? 
|V Give Me A Call! 

? 1445 AdUlwn Ave. East • 734-0400 

1 GEM STATE REALTY, INC. 


—South WestTempIc; 

' IT A-'^R A 0 k E^/4 

-Tonight - 

Kroakers Karaoke will be fea- 
tured from 9 pjn. to 1 ajn. ai the 
Blue Rocm, 613 Fremont, Rupert. ' 
Nightly except Sunday and Monday 
Karaoke will be featured from 8 
pjn. to 1 am. at the Mover Klub, 
402 Main N, Twin Falls. 

Saturday 

Kroakers Karaoke will be fea- 
tured from 9 pjn. to 1 ajn. at the- 
Big Kahuna, 9 E. Main, Deda 

Sund» and Tuesday 
FuU Moon Music Madness will 
play from 5 to 8 p.m. at the 
Riverside Bar and Reson, west of 
Buriey. 








Magic Valley Mall 


Enter to win the 



Now booking 


WEDDING RECEPnONS 

EXPECT ■ 
CONSULT^TION— 
CATCDING 
DANCE FLOOD 
LOUNGE 

'Eallrmnv 

I 20 ssB 0 samEaE,nmnuu I 
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yppne Minute to Midnight" . 
SHOPPING SPREE 

i 

open nil Day 8 iwi-Midnighti 

LOOK FOR THE BRIGHT YELLOW CLOCK 
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Grand Opening 

on becember 1'* ,^nd 2"'* 

Nokia" dig ital wi reless~pHone“f or 1 d 

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with two-year contract 


. mlnutes/month.t^? f 


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■^USCeUular 

Tfiv way people talk around hen\ 



y 





ifsallinslde: 


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JCPenriey 


I stores M catalog Hi.corri 




f&my, 


30^^ 25’‘ or 20""off 


We 


reg ular prices storewide 

I Limit oneicandy bar per person while 
supplies last in JCPenney Stores. 

'Otoeounl applies to foouiarprtco morchancJiso and Is limitod 
to stock on hand- Discount does not apply to Salo Prices 
Rod Tickotod Cioaranco. Value RlQhi. *2 or moro* prices," 
Cosmoiies and Ffoerancos, Boyd's Collection. Calving ’ ' - 
Klein®. Dotmalogica®, Easy Spinl®, Hanoi®, Nike®, MAX 
AIR®, Closeout Maitfossos, Coialog/Iniomoi and Outlet 
Stores, or to services and Gitl Cords. 10% of candy bars •' 
have 30% savings, 75% have 25Vo savings, and 15% hove 
_20^Mv,nfls^Discounts cannot be applied to priorpurchosos,—- 

or used in combination with any other offer. Cosh value ' '.i 

1/20th of one coni, Offer good Saturday, December 2 2000 ' 

only, 


Save on Catalog & Internet Orders! 




I Now through December 5, 

I Take 15-25% off orders from 
the XPenney Fal(/Winter '00 
Big Book", Holiday Big Gift 
— Book", '“Signature Series" 
Catalogs or Online. 


Take 25% Off" regular-priced 
apparel, shoes & 
accessories, window 
coverings, lighting, lamps, 
clo cks, wan art , mirrofs, 
badi, youth & adult bedcCng 
and luggage 


Take 15% Off” regular-priced 
electronics, toys, rugs, personal 
care products, musical 
instruments, sporting goods, 
baby bedding & accessories, 
furniture, 'housewaresrmajor — 
appTiances and floor 
care procfajcts- 



1-800-222-6161 and ask for “OPERATOR SWEET 

44 Or shop online at wwwJCPenney.com and Sweet 44 when 
prompted for a promotional code. 





6 PM . 7 PM 


30% O FF 

All Dresses, Pantsuits 
and Junior Holiday 
- Dress-Up Separates 


Men's St. John's Bay 
Whipped Stitch Polar 
Fleece Shirt 

Orig. '32“ 

S.le*T 2 ” 


CHECK OUT THESE HOURLY SPECIALS! 




7PM-8-PM 


$5 0FF_ 

Any Reg. or Sale 
Priced Jean includes 
Value Right Levi's 


$ 5 OFF 

Reg. or Sole 

Prie^ Jean _ 

includes Value 
— Righl-Levirs ' 


Sag. $24.99 

Professional Makeup 
Kil Blockbesler 

s.r.*I 4 ” 


Boy's Arizona 
Fleece Vest 

Orig. '19.99 



to PM. II PM 


50%OFF 

All Holiday 
Candles 


1 1 PM .MIDNIGHT 


50%OFFt 

All Ladles LaaHier| 
Cools and Pcinfs 




All Adult 
Athletic Shoes 

30% OFF 

Regular Prices 1 


Men's Select Mien's Bi^rZone 
Outerwear Polar Fleece Vest! 

flAO/ J4vii Orig. *30.00 i 

50% OFF $QW 

— Regular Prices' — SfllO — ^ 


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Knit Taps 

Reg.-ll 4.99- 



Junior 
Sweaters 

— Reg."‘29;99— 

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T^VIES-NeWS SPORXSblNEr-T’ 

DolM4jM26foriheIa«highsc^ ■ 

- j -Of chec k onBnerVisiiT&TmK^AiTOCfeLs 

^ _yvwjTOgicvaiiq^^ for spore n cu^ 

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! College of Southern Idaho 

I CLOSE 


Inside 


Scofesandstais'~77. D3~ 

Money 06^ 


Friday, December !, 2000 


J By Kevin Hall 

I TImei-Wewa witter ^ . 

3 Most coUege athletes spend 

: the spuner staying in^shape^ 

I ploying in summer leagues, 

I swimming or running. 

3 TVisha Gardner fights forest 

\ fixes. 

I “It was (the most fun) I’ve 
; ever had on 

1 Foewon 

^ of Southern 

* Idaho sopho- 

I 5 more. “I got 

1 to drive the 

• 5 engine and I 

' « ran a chain 

\ saw. I was 
i the only 
i who got to 
! do that." 

J Gardiner, T»i«k« 

1 19, is also Trisna 

i fiXl Gardiner 

- . I -'■-.Oh .ihis seasf. ** **** 

I on’s South- 

j em Idaho women’s basketball 
j team. Hailing from Vernal, 

* which she termed "the armpit 
? of Utah," Gardiner said she ini- 
j tially came to CSI because of 
I high school coach Kristi 
1 Putnam, a former Latty Golden 
] Eagle. 

] But shfe eventually sees her- 
1 s^ heading back home, where 
T she’ll probably"transier-toTthe - ~ 
1 University of Utah or Utah 
J State next year to finish her 
’ bachelor’s degree in child psy- 
’• chology. , 

1 As for continuing to' play b'as- 
’ •-^tball, the former Uintah High 

* ■^•state player isn’t so certain 
^ about the role the-game will 
; play in her future. 

I "I love. basketball,’’, sbe-said. . 

j “IjustdonVknow-lflwantiarL 
j play it anymore. 1 probably will^ 

i because I can’t imagine noC 
/paying basketball.” 

^ICOn the court, the 6-foot-O I 
1 I fjBxdiner likes to post down in 
. w Hie pmnt Md soap. . J 

' VL“I like to get in and battle , 
1 ; jyith people,” she said, 
t Gardiner’s vocal leadership • ' 
1 ^as become a staple in the 
^^am’s 6 a.m: practices, where 
^e takes teammates aside for a 
rallying cry, 

p First-year coach Kendall 

_ _ .Grant calls Gaidiner-‘-‘a rock.^^ — 

“She is stepping up and tak- 
ing a strong leadership role,” 
Grant noted in the team’s media 
guide. 

Through an eight-game win- 
‘ ning streak and a No. 6 national 
j janldng Hiis season, Gardiner is 
I Averaging 3.9 ppg and 5.4 rpg in 
Jlist over 13 minutes a night. But 
l^r tough and stable preserice 
often goes overlooked. [_ 

“She is paying the price to 
become a great player,’’ Gram 
said. 

Gardiners credits Grant and 

■ herte ammates for h elplng her 

Lgame. I! 

VWe’re just more team-orient- 
this year,” she said. “We’re 
tw well together. I look up ^ 
W all of my teammates. I think " 
^e*re going td do 'really well this ^ 

Iseason.” 

I With a coach who analyzes 


Reports have Boise 
State coach taking 
Oklahoma State job 

The Afoctated Pma 

OKLAHOMA CITY - Boise 
State football coach Dirk 
Koetter, who last week 
announced he had taken- himself 
out of the running for the job, 
has been named to replace Bob 
Siromoni at Oklahoma State, 


OWtKoatter ' that 

. . . Koetter, 41, 
had gotten the 
job. 

Efforts by The Associated 
Press to reach athletic director 


Dirk’s diary , 


WJ»» BolM State's Dirk Koetter has 1885; 

sioce helping guide Idaho Offensrve coordinator. San Fran St 
State to mo NCAA Division t-AA 1S88^: Off. coord UTEP 

lUhcnal wic as a player in 1981: 1889-93: Off, coord,! Missoup 

M82. Graduate assistant at Idaho 1894-95; Off. coord.. Boston College 
u - Off. coord.. Oregon ' 

198W4. Head coach. Highland High . i998i»Mirt: Head coach. Boise St. 

•’y Pl'o"" S'CVB Bunard said, "Nothins has 
WCTc not immediately successful. been planned yei.’”. ® 

vou^^Mm ^ spokesman Max 

you. sports mtom.a„oa(hrKtar Please see COACH. Page D 4 

^GDOWN 


CSI eagles 
squeeze 
Citrus by^3 

By Kevin Hell 

TImee-Hews wittTf" ' 

TWIN FALLS - The College of 
Southern Idaho unleashed its 
high-flying offense early and 
often with a higMght reel of slam 
dunks, but it was the Golden 
Eagles’ defense thafstole the 
show. 

Trapping, pressing, blocking 
shots andgonerally making a nui- 
sance of itself^the ^uthern 

I Idahirmen’s basketball team 
blew out California’s Citrus 
College 116-53 on the first night 
of the Arctic Circle Classic. 

Outplaying Citrus in every 
aspect, CSI shot 60 percent for 
the game on 47-of-78 shooting. 
Citrus hit a lowly 34.5 percent on 
20-of-S8. The Eagles ourrebound-- 
ed Owls 49-30. 

I'hursday’s early game; it 
..was; No. .20 Hagerstown 
rjCoaununity College (7-0) all over 
winless Snead State College (0- 

IO),T03-88. 

“I was so proud of our gijys 
defensively,” said CSI coach • 
Derek Zeck, whose team pro- 
duced 28 turnovers. “Our guys 
have really bought in to what we 
need.to do - the li;tle things.” 

^ The 63-poim mar^n of victory 
Please see CSI. Page D2 


Arctic Circle 

Ttxndajr'eteerM: 
Hagerstown 103, Snead SB 
CSt 116. Citrus 53 
-TodqTjadMUa: . 
Hagmstown vs. Citrus. 6 p.m. 
-CSI Snead, 6 p.m. 



-Section ;D, 


Rodeo’s 
10-day run 
hits Vegas 

The Associated Press 

-Vl'® - Fred IVhicficld is 
siill the best calf roper on the 
1 rofcssional Rodeo Cowboys 
Association circuit. He'll need :i 
big National Fin.~ils Roderi. thougli, 
to repeat as the country’s best 
overall cowboy. 

Whitfield begins defense of his 
> all-around title tonight whed^e 
lucrative NFR opens ii ICklay 
at a UNLV campus 'arena wher# * 
Che basketball floor has bcci 
replaced vnth tons of dirt. / 

By the time competition in eiglit 
events ends a week from Sunday, ' 
soine S4.5 million in prize moncy~~- ■ 
will have been won in the worJd’c 
richest rodeo. - ! 

Whitfield, the first black covvlioy' 
to win the .all-around champi- 
I i onship, comes 

NR on TV 


Tlw first round Of 


into the finafs 
.as the leading’ 
money wir>- 
ner in calf 


uwtcatiortai '■“‘r 

Rnals Rodeo will r'lpmg. Bui 

t>e broadcast on 1!’*^ Hockley., 

tape delay ‘ Texas, cow--- 

toBljhtonESPN’ 

in the overall 

standings, 

. , , , , about 530,000 

behind saddle Irrrmc rider Scott 
Johnston. 

Johnston, of Giistine. Texas 
leads the saddle bronc riders in 
camings and has also won monev 
riding, giving him 

m 64,1S0 for the season. 

“Fve always thought of winning 

— thc-saddle-bronc’litle.”7oh'nsi()h — 

said. “But 1 felt I had a shor .it the — 
. all-around if 1 ever had a lijalthv 
year. So I kind of plann^Pon it. 
but 1 just never got around to it 
unlit this year. I’ve been healthy 

The 27-year-old Johnston, an 
Australian native who came to the 
United States to compete in rodeo, 
was nearly killed in a plane acci- 
dent a month before the 1998’ 
NFR. He broke two vgnebrac in 
his back in the crash that killed 
pilot Johnny Morris and injurtid _ 
traveling partners '.\fa'fk and 
Marvin Garrett and- Thad“' 
Bothwell. 

Johnston stuck with his special- 
ty of saddle hroncs for most of 
3999 to lielp heal his Iwck. hut this 
year also rode bareback, though 
he did not qualify among the top 
15 to compete in the event in the 
NFR. 

Johnston will In.- pres-sed for the 
all-around by Trevor Brazile of . . 
Decatur. Texas, who won 5152,852 
during the season. Brazile has an 
advantage because he qualified 
..‘PJlibt finals in both .steer and calf 
roping. 

Diis year’s final is the I7th con- 
■ secutivc in Us Vegas, which lured 
the rodeo here from Oklahoma 
City in the 1980s with promise of 
big purses for the comixiiiiors. 

Diis year's purse is the biggest 
ever for the finals, which attracted 
a record 174.912 fans for ID iierfor- 
mances last year. 

A pair of animal rights groups 
have promised protests during the 
rodeo, claiming atlimals used in 
the event.s are abased. 


The Golden 
Eagles’ Ben Eze 
slams the ball for 
two of his 15 
poInts.-The 
College of 
Southerfi Idaho 
beat up visiting 
Ctthis College 
116-53 .Thursday 
night. 


I - ' • ‘^us-u. wuuning animals used in 

the evem.s are abased. 

New Yo rk Yankees snatch u^Mike Miissina " 

ra«AMOClrt«IPraM “But,asain.GcorBeSlcinbr«„ner ' 


I Avexy minute detail, Gardiner 
I learned that-she-dribbled-the“ 
2. . ba ll t oo jnuc h -and-wasn't-setcing- 
I ^fore shootixig. 

I But ift the sports life-lessons 
, that have taught her the most, 

I ^esaid. 

"Fve just grown up a lot,” she 
said. .‘Tvo learned a lot about 
myself through the game. It 
teaches so many lessons.” ♦ 

Question and Answer ' 

1. Who b your fevorite must 
^calartlst? . 

“Probably , the Dave 
! Matthews Band.” 

2. What do you wont for 
w-Qurbtznas? 

^TTwre’s u lqt_of_thlngs, Just_ 
clothw.^-^ "■ 

3. What’s your fovorlte 
movie?. 

- • “Happy Gilmore.” 

4. What’s ypur major? • 

“ChildpsychUogyr’ ^ — ' " 


NEW YORK - After beating 
the rest of baseball on the field, 
the New York Yankees beat 
everyone to Mike Mussina. 

“It just came down to who real- 
ly seemed to want me on their 
team the most," Mussina said 
_Thursdny_aftec.agreeing.to -an- 
$885 million , six-year c o ntract. 

The deal'gives the ihree^Umc ' 
defending World Series champi- 
ons a starting rotation that 
includes Roger Clemens, Andy 
Pettitte, Orlando Hernandez and 
Mussina. With just 13 players 
- signed, New York's payroll is 
$77.5 million. 

“It probably isn’t fair," 
Yankees manager Joe Torre said. 


But, asain, George Steinbrenner stancr from the (irsi game of 
in Now spring training." he said. ”Wc 
h o probably thinics might gd to the playoffs next yiar 
almo howtokeepdautgit." and I might not even gi. a 

« i’’"'' ’■hat's hotv 

8, compiled a 147-81 record with strong they are” 

baseball took 

Baltimore Onoles. He gets a $12 notice. 

million, signing bonus payable “It makes it very difficult ” 

Searile-genera F manager Pih“ 

Ciliick.aiid.at.Tl.oy've-gorttt'troi— 

2TO3, 514 tniUion^ 2004 and $17 three No: 1$ now.” 
million in each of the final three “New York wns.thc best fit for 
VI. e..., Mussina said. “It came 

New York has a $17 million down to who I was most 

option for 2007 with a $1.5 mil- impressed with, and I was most 

lion buyout, and Mussina gets a impressed with the Yankees Joe 
complete no-trade clause. Torre called me not even a week 

i^d he s not even the ace. after the World Scries, before he' 

It s been a long time since I went on vacation. To me-, that 

wasn I considered the No. 1 was a pretty big gesture.” 



Formet Baltimore pitcher Mike Mussina, center, receives hit New York 
Yankees jertey from Yankees Hall of Famer Yogi Berra, left, end Yankees man- 
Bgoi Joe Tone, alter announcing that he and the Yankees’have agreed to an 
S88.5 million, eU-year contract. 


— *'.vAA,o^jKCiiuze. 588.5 million, eU-yeer contract. .. 

Twin Falls boys win season opener against Burley 

ByHolIyKeyt ~ . 


By Holly Kfiyt 

TlmefrWewa writer 

^ twin FALLS - Getting outzmy— 
nnt-game jiners, the Twin' Falls 
High School.boys’ basketball 
team took a thiiller from visiting 
Burley in the'Bculns’ season 
opener. - - - 


• ciuiy wun 

turnovers, but relied on learn 
chemla,fy down the stretch for 


More high school results -02 

the 54^51 ivinTTi^a^r ^ 

“You always have to be happy 
with the firs: game,” said TWin 
Falls cooch Dan Vogt. “It’s 
. always tough t,o get that first 

wuiJl ^ - — - 

The non-conference matchup 
came down to the wire for the 
Bruins. Twin Falls trailed the 


Bobcats 48-49 with under two ’ 
minuics on the dock. But senior 
Brandon Nielsen pulled the 

— Brulm aheaiTvnihB iay-up. 

A Nielsen jumper made it 52- 
51, ond senior Geoff Bariium and 
Junior Leigh Ca^illo each 
♦ stepped to the line uT the last 30 

—seeondstotnake ii-S4-51. 

Bwley had one last chance. 
With three seconds remaining, 
junior Jonoihon' Barker threw up 


a 3-pointcr. The ball bounced on 
the rim, but didn’t fall ns the 

buzzer sou nde d 

“We just threw it up, "'said' 
Bobcat, coach Matt Harr. “It was 
kind of one of those ESPN shots.” 
Tlie game was close oil the way 
through. Burley senior David 
-Riedel hit-a short jumper to starr 
the game while the Bruins had 
some turnover trouble. Riedel 
had four more points while Josh 


Garn chipped in five to put 
Burley up 18-13 m the end of the 

— first-quortcr. 1 — - 

“We were taking scoring 
chances away from ourselv'es," 
Vogt said. "That’s just something 
we’ll have to practice.” ' 

A couple of 3-pointers - one 
from senior Daniel Miller and 

one from Barnupi - in the second 
quarter put Twin.Fdlls w-ithin one 
■Pieose see BRUINS, Page D2 



, ALBUQtfeRQUE, N.M. (AP) - 
Olympic champions Stacy 
— — ;• - Dragilarand Angelo Taylop'were ' 
selijcteil Thursday to receive the 
Jesse Owens award as the year’s 
outstanding track and field ath- 
letes. 

Dragila, of Pocatello, won the 
first Olympic women's pole'vaidr"* 

had u winning vault of 15 feet, 1: 
indi in the Sydney Games. - 
Taylor, 21, won the 400-meter 
hurdles in Sydney and was part 
of the winning 1,600-meter relay 


top-track ^ 

=.hc join /\ii-/\meiie$-teafn 


an Olympic 
vcofsadAven 
lhe'^6p?^of 

stK,D„£ii, 

“To be rec- 
ognized with such a prestigious 
honor is very overwhelming,” • 


tearij. Dtagflasaid. » • 

Toyjpr and Dragila broke the world. record 

Dragila said — three times during- the' Infest 
they were sur- Golden Spike Tour. She also won 
prised to __her fifth straight title in the U.S. 
receive the Indoor Championships in Atlanta 

awards, espe- witha vaultofl5-1.7S: * 

dally during During the outdoor season,-she 
an Olympic broke her own world record in 
..-Un. thcaaopoftittbat -siandaid 
■wffat’she Won ttic'-OIympid Trials 
with a vault of 1S-Z25. 

Dragila has won eight U.S. 
indoor and outdoor titles. 

Taylor also was the lAAF - 
Grand Prix overall champion and 


■one of only four U.S; track ‘andi ' 
field athletes to win two gold - 
- medals in Sydney. His victory in 
the hurdles was one of the most 
dramatic of the Games. •••■■ 

The two Olympic champions 
said their lives have been ne^c 
since Sydney. 

“It’s been crazy," Dragila said, 
.jra^fl.she.'had to cut.sbor't a ■ 
vacanori \vith her fffmlly'ih ' ' 
Austria after the' Camel *Tve 
been flying all over the country 
doing appearances. I Just started 
training again about two and a 
half weeks ago.”- • 


TWIN FALLS -r College of 
Southern Idaho sobhombre 
Stephanie Martin and frethtnan 


Karla Benano have b<^ named to 
the NJCAA volleyball All-America 
•■•.first team. 

|'■"’■^rtarUn led the ScCnIc West 
Athletic Conference in blo^ end ‘ 
ranked seventh nationally with 


Shoshone tops Mushers, keeps streak intact 


SHOSHONE - Monica Uhrig’s 14 
poim.s in the second quaner helped 
the Shoshone Indians erase a 10-8 
deficit and remain undefeated by 
beating Northside Conference girls’ 
b.isl<etball rival Camus County 
Higii 58-35 Thursday. 

‘“The girls really picked it up and 
played well,” said Shoshone conch 
Tim Chapman. 

Jasmine Harris led the Indians 
. with six assists and Candace 
- Blodgett was 5-of-7-off the liench for 
10 |x;ints. ■ 

“1 liiDughrshe did a nice-job for' 
us, "Chapman said. 

Shoshone (7-0 ovenill, 2-0 in con- . 
feretice) hosts Hagerman at 6 p.m. 
S.iiurday. ' ' 


Local sports 

GCO)Wi«i-5cf«,iD 5s„j Ea»J P«»K»ir. 

CutdrigliSM htnn 

0^1 TwKw,.g,£.e<iy>,n.a»)r9Mrej«M- 
’'rVrwCa>yiMit/nCvrt 

Hansen JV 65, MVCHS 44 ■ 

TWIN FALLS - Bonnie Freestone 
scored 26 points to help the unde- 
feated Huskies junloc-varsiiy to u 
65-44 win over the Conquerors 
Thursday. • 

Jacqueline Sweet had IS for 
MVCHS. 

"Magic Valley Christian's 
Jacqueline Sweet used her height 
as an advantage," said Hansen 
assistant coach Nlike Pfeifer. “We 
weren't able to Ixix her.’’ 


Hot Hands 

Top (Tb' Knooi tMtunau Mat h SM 
Moge and Wood Rlv«r v«twmQu(^ gamM 
d Nctar knOvtdutlpb)* awiipea 

will run naakiy iitrougnoui tna taaton. 
CoKtiM ihouU lax ftaa rrM^ ID 7344530, 

Atft.; Spaa. Cooeftai tna Mv» not rteawod 
callorr Tti (m m gw tJiMtcdrvewttfwuM 
cal 7350229 to raeorvo rspiacamanti. 

SiKS an Posad on a mrvnum tn« gmaa 


Dietrich JV 79, ISDB 36 

UniTRICH - The Dietrich High 
junior-varsity squad run out to an 
early leadihat increased as the 
game went on, stopping Idaho 
School for the Deaf and Blind 
Thursday. 

Ayleeii Sorensen led the Blue 
Devils with 21 points and Michdie 
Anderson added lll.-HRuth Anna 
Spooner had 18 and Aubrec 
Thompson cli ip peJ in IG for t he vi-i- 
iting Kapitirs 

‘‘ft'was-jusffastbrcak.s'andgood~ 

offense and defense,-’’ said Dietrich 

Dietrich’s JV (G-0) next hosts 
Bliss on Tuesday. 


Wendell 49, Hagerman 38 

WENDELL - Wendell outmus- 
tied Hdgennun down the .stretch to 
claim a 49-38 victory Thursday 


HmwmraaM 

warti«-« 

woa mgijio-« 

•VMts itlh Itmt *rr*r B m t. t»»n I 


' Murtaugh 63, 

Castleford39 

MURTAUGH - Senior Ashic 
^Vard powered the Red Devils witi 


^^Jortion. • 

L Htteeck. WarxM 
A. Snai>«v«r.^V«l«y 
A. StrrpMn. Ham 
A.Al«n. Dado 
J Cnasum. Dado 
K. Coati. Tnin Pdb 
K.SgtfK Tnn Fail' 
. C. Lab. Giama Fatry 
K. Hartang. WarxW 
S Khg.BiAU 


Boys’ basketball 

Glenns Ferry S9, 

Wood River S4 • 

HAILEY - Behind 19 nt ihc 
beginning of the founh quarter, the 
Wolverines fought back' before los- 
ing a close one to the Pilots, 59-54. . 

Wood River senior' Adam 
Marcrofi had 13 points and Glenns 
Ferry jiraor Mark Black had 12 to 
^ lead their respective teams. ‘ 

“We need to learn that, the gamo 
is four quarters, not one," said 
Wood River couch' Jeff Loisen. “We 
also need to remember never to 
gireup.” 

The Wolverines (0-l,overall) trav- • 
el to Wendell Thursday. . 

. 

ncoo Avt)i <$< K CvwTM X iw, I r.tesa IX nte 1 

taaiOflMHXNigtfvaX Tmi. III^M 
XaEnpA-Ovra Fan I |Xm I. Swi* t. CMn X 
i^mwM»netiiM.itMF<>»OroFana 


Aberdeen 74, Buhl 66 

ABERDEEN •• The Tigers scored 


1.60 per game; B^saxw toppM ihc_ 
Eariw In kills wfth 431 and hid the 
I- cighth-best'aces-per-garae 'average 
in the nation. ; ' , 

■'Utoh Volley' State's Ale 
Domingos and Irish PettingiU of 
■ Wcks College were also chosen as 
_ fiist-tcom All-Americas. ■ 


- Lisbon, Portugal - Andre 
Agassi relied on his game and some 
help from the others to reach the 
semifinals of the Masters Cup. 
Marat Safin didn’t even have to 
play to advance. ‘ ’ 

Agassi beat Yevgeny Kafelnikov 

6- 1, 6-4 in an impressive perfor- 
mance. And when Gustavo 
, Kuerten defeated Magnus Norman 

7- S, 6-3 in the, last match.Thun^y,, 
the mathematics of the round-robm 
format gave Agassi a place in the 
semifinals. 

Safin was assured of a place in 
the last four when .Alex Corretja 
beat Llcyton Hewitt 3^,f7-6 (3). 6-3. 

Today, Safin plays Pete 
Sampras. U the 20wcor-old Russian 
wins,- he Will alsb make sure of 
becoming the youngest playct* ever 
to finish the year as No. 1. 

Slaji keys Vols’ win 
over N.C.-Ashevllle 


■ SpoFte In brtaf ' ' ^ 

klrineyMofflo'ilal ],■ ■■ [ 
TuikeyShoot Is SuSfay'''^'- 

TWIN PALLS -A The Twin Falls 
Gun Club’s 15th AnnuaTWhyne 
—Kinney Memorial Turkey Shoot b 
Sundayfromllojn.to4pjn.' ! ' 
Shooters of all ages and cieperi- 
Mce are welcome to partldpate. 
There will be guaranteed shots'.. 
Turkeys, ham and steaks wlU'bc ' 
awarded, and the Twiir Falls 
Optimist Qub' will raffle off two 
870 Winchester Express shotguns. 
For raffle tickets, contact any' 
Optimist Club member or coll 
Dennb Boivyer at 726^265 or John , 
Head at 733^900. ■ '. 

Biaalix tetires from , 

RMS director's post ' ■ , • , ' 

EAGLE - Susan Breatu^ the 
time executive director of the 
Rocky Mountain Section of the 
PGA, plans to retire at the end, of 
the year and po^bly pursue a n^s- ' 
ter’s degree, th* 'orgaaJxatlon ■ 
Bonouncedthbweek. " 

Breaux will bo succeeded by, 
Darrell Bock tn January. Bode is 
currently the associate director of 
professional golf management at 
M^hodbt College in Fayettev^, 

Brraux canm tirvorirftr^mR^ 
don in 1987, when she was tbe orga-- 
nization’s only employee, and oper- 
ated office our of a sparc'M- 
nxan in her home. Today, a'siaff of 

fourworksoutof a l,600<mtu«4oot 
facility in Eagle,' serving uie ne^ 


21 points In the fourth quartcr to scored 16 points os No, 7 

break open a dose game and defeat 'i Tennessee overcame o slow start in 


KNOXVILLE, Tenn. - Reserve • d 240 members and apprentl^s 
on Slay scored 16 points as No, 7' and supervising more than 100 


Muru powereu me KCO uevas with K. Ha«ir.g. Wor>*! 4 « A/ j/uiiu* uiiu roppiewej, 

a gumt-high.29.noints to.help - T’ DiHcfw.Kntwty a am .hb-for. lo-io-theJoslng-effort 

..Lj_ __ T -e Cm»M It I Ahi>nl*st> fnnU I i 


Buhl 74-66. 

j Scan Von Elderen led the Indians 
with 19 points and Ty Popplewell 


an 85-59 victory over North 
Carolina-Ashcville on Thursday 
night. 


tournaments each year across tfae 
region. 


Munaugh win its conference open- 
cr jR.iin-iC Casilcford. 


■e. CunrwI.Kmb^ 
A. McMnn. KanMo 



Aberdeen took a nine-point 
i nto t he locker room at the 


fort.^ jJcncacd-Woods-had-12-polnts, — 

lead • Marcus Halslip 11, and Vincent ' gOlflng 
half. Y a rbrou gh had 10 Mintsjind.l2_l....TWtN FALLS:- 


Caiileford junior jarhie Bergsma ASim«m kiiwm a #5 ' I watched as Buhl fau^t back rebounds for the Volunteers (5^), 

H rhn l.v.At., — 1 — r . ? — ■ rAt!it/A'n'Cfi.n r: - _ — 


-led the Wolves with 13 pdims." — 
"It »vas an overall good effort by 

enoeh tmsn Dwmpjon. “ft was a 
giHKi win by the whole team," 

The Lady Red Devils (2-4 overall, 
1-0 conference) host Hagerman 
Tuesday, 


MU t Fm :)!■ . 6im r] CX4 17. xraM : 

M.AfiL&-i|4i-t^i Uuen; xwm ?. 4/rW 4. T (Vv» 
» Hitn ti^UArvm TanTJirau 
- 1 ittUiJaM- Cien-ir. 


Ss “ Buhl 54, Flier 32--, - .. 

the third quunur and that proved to i Central Idaho win 

be ilic difference in the fi.lme. “'’[■t the Wildcats Diursduy night. 

Wendell’s Lauren Haycock connect- . 80t on them right off the bat 

ed. on two 3-poimen* and led'oll - ounpn^’’ jaid Buhl coach Joe 
.scorers with 22ip»in(s, and senior - ®hcpurd. We convened some of 
• • • - Tiffany Davis cliipped in'lO. -our— shots— and— played— great — 


"Haycock did a great job for us,"' 
Wendell coach Kyon Pope said. 
"She hit some hig sliois but i( wa.s 

— really ,! leamefi'ori." - 

Wemlell iiii[)r<ived to 4-2 and 
|jlay.s ai Kimberly 'I'uesday. ' 


Malad 54, Deefo 46 

DECLO- .Malad .started the game 
hiu, scoring 18 points in the first 


quarter and. held off a iato Declo- - Blissbeiund dici 


—our— shots— and— pluycd— great— 
■ defense." 

Kristen Coon paced Filer with 11 
and the only Wildcat to reach dou- 

. ble figures. 

'Hie Lady Indians (3-1 overuil, 14) 
confei<!nce) travel to Jerome 
Saturday. 


111914. s 

') Xngl riMnr 

lilMU'l fmr! .-raoij.c«a'ii.n*)rTavi< 


' Ketchum 41, Bliss 35 

BLISS - 'I'hc Cutthroats took the 
early lead and were able to keep 


T W«o. S<jlw 3 a 

A N*(son, Oooovvj . 4 7.5 

. c ue. Owis ... 4. 254. . 

Asalots . ' - 

04mM Amu. 

S Cnoney. GoMng 4 460 

A Wihftson. Qiytty 3 460 

.AAgUar.ecrv 3 43 

N. Pownon. r<r 2 4 

A MeCttOn. Vftl«v 6 4 

K ero^Vaioy 0 4 

0 Colon, voier 6 3S 

O. Srnvion. Htnoon 4 35 

KSw/KTwnFia $ 32 

A07F Souroooweta 

Steals 

Plww G4m« stu 

C.ue. ClonmrwTv 4 535 

A6<vek.v«afy ' '6 .46 

G CoMa Vo««y 6 4 

A McCiuloy, EluhT 3 4 

I — H-HoatWH 3 4 -- 

K. Svur*. Tvrti Fus 5 36 

K V/A»rTnon, Oirt 3 36 


3-polnwro 

FtW** ' Camoi 

J C<4«1. WoiVJol 4 

A AlWi. D*« 4 

— 9 Chwwy. Gooiloj 3— 

A Kolso. VoSoy 6 

'N Ha.Kntw'y 3 

C P4U0fV)n. Gooorrg 4 

E.Farrrj.t'ennjForTy 4 
L. Hsy«xk. Wonocl 5 

' M Don«lson. Twn FtKj S 

K WAdmKn BuN 3 


(0iakc'a'5&n ledge into the'feunh 
before losing. 

.The Indians host Middleton, on 
Saturday. - — - • — 

^ MMM74.M* 

fcW. l|l7Bl9-a . 

wruti.M 

• Wi^VMt FT** X Cto (. 
«»«pimi.twaiix4*wtxh>waiwwi 

Hansen 67,. Ketchum so 

- HANSEN - Behind 22 poinu by 
Derek Davj#, Honsen rolled to a 


' who completed th^ five-game sea- " 
son-opemng homestand undefeat- 
ed. Brelt Carey scored 13 points 
and Andre Smith 11 for the 
Bulldogs (3-2). 


Bruins 


Municipal Golf Course has^re«_ ' 
opened for winter play. ’ ' 

Tee times are available by call- 
ing733-3326. ... .7.-, 

• haaubaffaodwirerepm ' 


I firaKuancr lead and overcame a Falls'held 

I Iterd-quartcr luU to beat Ketchum t^o„sfrc 

Thursday.- n u 

- - Honsen took an early IW), lead 

that paced the rest of the game for t j 

-thd-Hhsldcsi'who'dJsb got JBnJfnts i -^®had 

from Jarvis Powers ond 12. from seco 

Cody Powers. Co^h Sofre had an ' ~ “And we h 
impressive game for the visitors; end.” 

-- puning up 22 pointe of his,own. Castillo 

“Davis had ng[^^mc.He'sjhc pomts ai 

Icador'of the'leariir’ lald'Hanscn rebounds fc 

cooch Brady Swallow. “Tonight we . As the s 
ployed together, ond that was oor 
greatest strength.” ► /^OT 

Hansen (14J)-plays Blis5 loday"in 

• the opening round of the Bliss 
Tournament. 


. Dontlnued fromW the Bruins puljed bade ahead (or 

point at the half. the von. - ‘ ' 

In the third period, Nielsen lyid “Basketball's a Journey,"' Vogt 
stx of his game-high 19 points to said. “Ihis was oiJyp. small step 
Pu* ‘je Jtuins up 4D38. Twin .'but It’s good to get that fint one 


FalJs'held its lead until two free 
throws from Barker pulled tlyJ 
Bobcats- even with the Bniins at 
4W8 with 2:48 on the dock. 

J . JWe had good team chemistry . 


out of the way." 

Twin Falls hosts Mountain 
Home today, while Burley (M) 
will host Dedo 'Wfednesday. . " 


“lirihe second h^," Castillo said.' 

■ “And we had some big-plays at mU ■^ UHMaiS "'•/ 

the end.” - nnFri>ih«<»r(iiwi(tiMwviuuiHmx 

CastiUo finished with sevftn T: . 

_pomts and five defensive 

rebounds for Twin Falls. ' 

- As the seconds ticked away, • ». 


ch.irgcio win 54-Jf), 

The Hnrneis pulled to within 


Puuli Ochi scored 12 points to 
lead the Cutthroats, with Erica 


fiire^in thj^fpjirU Conncllcy.addmg.ninLin.the.win-- 15.poinis-Candace_Ljijb-add4»4l-l 


Hie inside Mjiiring strength of junior- 
Jamie Chatburn, but it wu^tuu lit- 
tle. too late. Chatburn finished with 
16 points and juiiior’Amy Allen 
added eight to lead Declo. 

Th_e Hornets fall to 2-3 and travel 
to Wood River on Saturduy. The 
game i.s set for a 7;^ tip-off. 




Butte County 47, 

Gooding 45, OT 

, GOODING - The Pirates outlust- 
4 ed the .Senators (I-4) in a see-saw 
battle which neither team ever led 
f»y more than five points. 

Senior Sadie Cheney led Gooding 
with 16 points before fouling out 
and Brea Schcer added 10. The 
Senators connected on three 3- 
poiniers hut it was free throws 
down the stretch that made the dif- 
ference. 

"Nobody really stood out in the 
game." Gooding couch Andrew 
Mnrelto said. “We were-tied In the 
fou^pnd the bJagestJuad at' any 

■ hmitwjMinuyWfivefralnrs'. We-just - 
couldn’t pull it oili," . 

Gooding’s ne.xt game will be at 
Declo on Dec. 7. 1'iiHiff is at 7:30. 

Ik«C>W9e,tkata4t,OT 

<«**8 ' II119IU.49 

t>jtqca'KiTi<r|.n<D)7.iv>n] u»4 ami atwu 
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Glenns Ferry 46, 

Kimberly 42 

GLENNS FERKY - In u some 
that tvas close (he entire way, the 
- Pilots inched by the BuBdogs 4642 
in overtime Thursday. 

Eva Farri.s led Glenns Fcny with 


— ning effort: — 

Sundii Brizendine led Bliss with 
18 points 

"Once we start making our bas- 
kets we’ll be fine," said Bliss coach 
Lane Durtschi. "I'm proud of the 
girls and their good hustle." 

Bli.s.s (2-2) travels to Dietrich next 
Tuesday to take on the Blue Devils. 

'I3l4tr.4l 

aos iitti.M 

i«nnjn« IX $<■,> i IkMt cm:w« J 

Hortrv &« n few WfWos 16^1, 15 

Burley 49, Preston 45 

BURLEY - Behind 15 points from 
Alissu Sorensen Thursday, the 
Burley girls slipped past Preston,- 
49-45, 

■ The Bobcats jumped out to the 
first-quarter lead, but fell to a 
seven-point deficit at the half due 
to turnovers. Sorensen hot play and 
u cotiple of late baskets by Liz Brice 
proved to be the difference in the 
second half. 

“Sorensen was huge in the sec- 
ond. half, and Brice came through 
with those big shots in the ena,” 

• said Burley coach Gordon Kerbs. “It 
wasa great team effort" 

— BuHoy-(^3) mtvels-to BlftckToot 


WUY ■ 'urtii|.« ' 

. I a Boon t WM L tUto IF. ^ 

^ |»fr ri^X OrW I. t, 18 lYOrttfi X 


points and 15 rebounds. Elaine 
Gunnell put in li points with Sura 
Plew adding 10 for Kimberly. 

"It was an exciting and good- 
game - it could have gone cither 
way,” .said Glenns Fcny coach KcUi 
McHune. "If we hud made our shots 
curlier we could have finished the 
, gumc u little earlier." 

Glenns Ferry (2-4)-is ut home 
ugolnsc Meibu Surarday.- 

otwaniwr isiirii.4i 

rO.»Y«4 'I I««. isij.;r«, 
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t*<y 71. FoM M. 

Carey S3,"Rlchll6l(l 30 

CAREY - Megan Peterson scored 
17'points and Jesse Rathkc odded 
12 .(0 lead the Panthers to a 53-30 
win over the Tigers Thurs^y. 

The hosts outscored Richfield 26- 
20 In (he second h^f. ' . 

“Tonight was un off-night," said 
Curcy couch Mark Sauvogeau. “We 
got It back together in the second 
half." ' 

The Lady Bears (3-2 overoU, 1-0 
conference) host Shoshone 
..Tuesday. . .(4-., • — 

. CnrUMMS , 

' iiMti-e 

^HlS3yR>niirftM>APwwl4(VS>im4fMX ' 
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ISD^ 71, Dietrich 67 

DIETRICH - The Raptors 
outscored the host Blue Devils 2lilS 
in the final period by caphitlizing on 
Dietrich turnovers, and Idaho 
School for the Deaf and Blin d vron 
-its opcncron the road 'Thuraiiy. 

ISDB’s Erik Henson led all scor- 
ers with 32 points. Freshman &ott 
Southwick paced Dietrich with 21 
points leading thtec playcrsdn dou- 
ble figures. 

.Dietrich (0-1) plays at Raft River . 
on Saturduy. 


go 17UI7t1-n 

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CUn’CHit'F hcN M«k>S 14 Oovi X nrw 12 8 t«M 

I0><4l.MSa4>win >iM».t]1SIin 
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. Valley 59, Murtaugh 32 

HAZELTON - Class A-3 Valley 
had few troubles dispatching the A- 
4 Red Devils 5^32 on ’Hiursday. 

Rob Black led the way for 
Vikings with IS points, and Veljko 
Rcstik had 13 points. After taldhc a 
22-14 lead at half. Volley was able 
to control the game. with strong 
pressure' def cnsc. 

"I thought the key to the game 
was the great defense,” said 'Valloy 
coach Roger Careslo. “Everyrfne 
contributed to the points, cveryotie 
played well the pressure defense 
did the job.” 

y«UW-(2-0) travels .to.Buhl.ncxt-, 
• Tu^fda/totnlco on the Indians.^' ' ' 

UUff UWlitUK 


ConUnuedftwnDl ’ 

- was the largest of tiiD season for 
CSI (8-1) ahd it was Southern 
ldaho's46th straight win Inside 
iheSouthern Idaho gym. 

“It’s great lo be back In our 
friendly confines," Zeck said. “But 
tve now wo have to do a better job 
of getting ready for the road.” 

Tony Bobbitt had a game-high 
20 points and nine rebounds' to 
lead five Golden Ea^es in. double- - 
figures. 

Afterword. Bobbitt said it was a 

. leameffortihal goithe.win. 

' “1 came out focused,” Bobbitt 
said. “Coach has said it’s all about 
team basketball. We just did that 
welLi ' 

Ricky Clemons broke out 'of hls' 
sco^ funk vrith IBpoInts and 11 
assists, Blandon Ferguson added 
17 points, while Benjamin Eze had 
IS and Marko Popovic 12 for CSL 
, Fred WUEams led the Owls (1-5) 

■ with IS points. 

• Besides the 28 Cititis turnovers. 
GBi bfOCiced li shnK whll*» ril4b lrig~ 
out 36 assists In the Tout. Uche 
Okafor collected six ^ats. atnis 
coach Eric Anderson said his team 
just wilted under CSTs pressure 
defense. 

*^6 just hit a wallj” he sold; 
“When they got the momentum;'li 
just went the other'way, ITs kind 
of discouraging that we di^’t fin- 
ish stronger." 

Trailing by 23 to begin the sec-: 
ond half, Williams sco^ the first ' 
seven points for Citrus as his fade- 
away 3-poInter brought the Owls 
backtdJlat6(J-39. ' " ' 

After Williams scored his seven ■ 
three minutes into the half, howev- 


sirctch the lead to 59 with 230 in 
thegome. ' , 


Dominic Crutchfield’scored 19 
points to lead four Hagerstown 
players in double figures as the 
No. 20 Hawks swambed winl^ 
Snead State 103-88 in me opening 
game of the Arctic Cirde Classic 

-'Thursday.- -■ - - 

Ian Brennan chipped In 16, 
Julius.Gause 15 and Eric Branholti_^^_ 
-Mforthewlnruas. 

Quinton Wllliatns scored a. 
game-high 21 and grabbed 15 
rebounds for the Parsons (0-10), 
who had 28 turnovers. Clevie ' 
ParkCT sowed 13 and Lamar Byi^ 
Russell Macon and 'I^rone Lu^er 
each added 10. ■ • 

Snead ' . outrebounded , 
HMersto,wn61-4Z , 

Snead dosed the gap ,tb nbia*«t | 

eoriy in the seqond half, btfi i 

t m . Iw Haaerstown-nuF-midwdy— 

through the naif stiietched the le^ * 

to 20 and the Hawks never- relln- i 

quished the momentum. Snead ' 

trailedbyl3athalftime. | 


|i24»lHn2M<ll>ikn4|i8g)XiMMMI. 


CWJW_t»74M1iax482X6tM»MHaW2» 

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mrw minutes into the half, howev 

er, the Owls were otily.able to put !Efj!Liaifci7aM»r'i.-.uMte,r»_uJ4 
up Mvetv;more Roints over .the. >- 

-ensuing nine mlnutPiq-flnBlly «ynrt, - '■ 

ing <m a Chris Powdl jumper with S«('te 'r - '.. 'r 

Wt By Ihat.potaL th« Eajk, 

.i.™^-43. , .J 1.,, ' 

Before dtrtis knew what tad hit ' 

W.thettadL^wniSQAvittSilLto^ ’ i*- 

Tne Golden E^es displayed their .»A«cfci*«c7«eMtf«)a^8axi»aSi^ 

long-range firing power late, noil- . (»^^'*’<c«e«rai6»a8in(MnuiAaMHcc 
tag four 3-potaters In n Tow to TiST^SiWciaSKaaiS!?: 



SPORTS 


FfJdiy, 0«C8mb«r 1, 3000 — Tkne»4(mrT«1n fiOi.- btiho — 


( HistGiie Garter eateh keys clinch fo 


- ; MlNNEAPOIIS(AP)-rittinflIyr 
'ihc 1,000th catch of Cris' Cher's ' 
.■‘career was a touchdown. 

Carter became the secomT 
- -teceivM in NFL history to reach 
the milestone as the Wnnesota 
• Viking beat the 
Detroit Lions 24* 
17 on Thursday 
night to clinch a 
playoff spot, 

The 'Vikings 
also needed 
Robert Smith’s 
.43-yard touchdown run with 3:04 
r, r em ai n ing that gave them a 24-10 
lead. Smith’s second TD of the 
:game came on the first play after 
... ithe Vildngs stopped the Lions on 
fourth-and-10 at the 50, He 
rushed for 117 yards on 17 car- 

- The Vikings (11-2) will wrap up 
' ' the Central Ldvision title Sunday if 
> Dallas beats Tampa Bay. 

Carter needed five receptions 
againsf the Lions to become the 
second player in NFL history with 
1,000 catches. Jerry Rice has 
1,259. Carter’s 121 TD catches also 
^ranks second to Rice. 

!. Caner caught his fourth pass at 
yie Lions' 4 on the Anal play of the 
■ 'first quarter. On the first play of 
jthe second quancr. Carter beat 



Minnesota Vikings wide receiver Crts Carter, right, beats Detroit Hone safe^ 
Kywinn Supemew for his 1000 th career touchdown catch In the second quar- 
ter Thursday night In Minneapolis. The Vikings defeated the Uorts 24 - 17 : 


Mfcty Kywin Supemaw in the end 
aonc and caught a 4-yard pass 
from Daume Culpepper to make it 
14^. 

Carter finished with seven 
receptions for 45 yards. 

The teams traded field goals 


near end of the first half, with 
the Lions’ Jason Hanson hitting a 
52.yardcr with 1:12 remaining and 
Vikings’ Gary Anderson kick- 
ing a 40-yarder with four seconds 
left.' 

“1110 Vildngs remained m control 


— unlil -Lions-linebacker~Allcn* 
Aldridge intercepted a pass at the 
Minnesota 9. James Stewart 
scored oh a 3-yard run, cutting the 
Vikings’ lead to 17-10. 

The Lions (8-5) faced founh and- 
10 from the M on their finaLdrive, 
but Stoncy Case, was sacked by 
Talancc Sawyer. On the next play. 
Smith scored on the 43-yard TD. 

The Vikings needed Smith’s 
touchdown, because Case complet- 
ed a 40-yard touchdown pass lo 
Larry Foster with 13 seconds 
remaining. Foster caught eight 
passes for 106 yards. 

The Lions played the final tluee 
quarters without quarterback 
Charlie Batch, who re-oggravaied 
a rib injury late in the first quar- 
ter. He was sent to the sidelines 
three times with the injury in a 
Nov. 23. game against New 
England and returned the two 
times he was needed. This time, he 
could not return. 

Case finished the game, com- ' 
plcting 23 of 33 passes for 230 
yards and rushing for 62 yards on 
six carries. 

Culpepper broke Fran 
Tarkenton’s 34-ycar-oltl Vikings' 
record of 376 yards rushing in a 
season by a quarterback. 

■ Culpepper has rushed for 391 
yari^ 


Chicago pulls out a 
win against Hawks 


A'TLANTA (AP)-In a matchup 
of the two worst teams in the 
NBA. the Chicago Bulls finally 
found another team they could 
bea;. 

Ron Mercer scored a season- 
high 30 points, including 12 in the 
fourth quarter, and the Bulls- 
. gained their second win of the 
season Thursday night bv beating 
the Atlanta Hawks 91-82 to snap 
a nine-game losing streak., 

Tlie Bulls (2-13), who still have 
the worst, record in the league, 
also won their first road game of ‘ 
dte sea-Son after eight losses. 

The Bulls’ other win was 9S-90 
over Orlando on Nov. 9. 

“It's great for these guys to get 
a win,'' said Chicago coach Tim 
Floyd. “It got to a point where 
there was .some doubt in their 
minds.’* , 

Tlie Hawks, who have the sec- 
ond-worst record in the NBA (3- 
13), were led by Jason Terry with 
22 points. Alan Henderson and 
Ltirenzen U'rigln added 15 points 
each. 

Rocktts 109, Nuggets 105 

DENVER - Kenny Thomas 
scored five of his season-higli 18 


points in ot’enime and Steve 
Francis and Cuttino Mobley had 
22 points each as the Houston 
Rockets ended tlie penver 
Nuggets' five-game home win--, 
‘ning .streak. 

Francis also hadd six assists 
and seven rebounds. Hakeem 
Olajuwon scored only nine jwims 
hut had a basket and two steals 
in .bverume as the Rockets 
out.scored tlie Nuggets 1 1-7,- 

Bucks 108, Celtics 97 

MILWAUKEE - Glenn 
Robinson matched his season- 
high with 2.5 points and Sam- 
Cassell added 19 points and, a 
season-higli I-l avsists to lead tlie 
.Milwaukee Bucks to a 108-97 vic- 
tory over Boston on Thur.sdnv 
night. 

Paul Pierce led the Celiic.s with 
.14 point.s, sh(K)tlng IO-of-14 from 
the field and IO-of-11 from the 
free-throw line. Antoine Walker 
added 20 ptiints and eight 
rebounds. 


Basketball 

NBA Standings 

- . 'MtlwUST - - 

EASTDHmnPEKE 


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. Thursday's NBA Boxos 

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IN THE BLEACHERS : By Steve Moore SoUKOrLJ*; 

— — college basketball-^- 

ffpj^ ‘Afctic Circle Classic, aiCSI. 6 p.m, 

. High school girls' basketball 
I Ant. Falls at Filer. 4:15 D.m. 

. I Twin Falls at Jerome. 6 p.m, 

• 2 BuricyatBiackfoot, 6 p.m*. 

. • T Valley at Roll River, 6 p.m. 

. . HiiicresiatMinico. 6;l5p,m. 

• * • . RicWieifl at Oakley, 7:30 p.m. 

^ Hlgh^scho ol boys’ tosket ball 

- ^ kimbeily at Am. Falls, 4:15 p,m, 

- rfl • 4:i5 p.m, 

Tfe. / - Munaugh at Keichum, 5 p,m, 

F ^ • Mt. Homo at Twin Palls. 6jD.m, 

C. V Gooding at Shoshone. 7:30 D,m, 

> ‘“x Raft River at Richfield, 7:30 p,m. 

' P \ IL Hogerman at Camas. 7;3P p.m,- 

•^ylr P / TfCA at Sho-Ban, 7:30 p.m 

■■ ■ tEiWikor 

I Tennis. Masters Cup ES 

- *■*. Football, NFL Rog Champleihhlp ES 

- • I Tennis. Masters Cup ES 

'Relax, ScootermanI I’m goir>g to try the Heimlich hniiiams Woiid criaiionge tn 


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VIKINGS 34 , UONS IT 
CW9 0 19 14.17 

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HURRICANES 7. fUERSO 


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ESPN 1:30 p,m. 

TNT 2 p.m. 

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iger tops PGA Tour awards list 


- - JACKSONVILLE, FI;i. (AP) 
Tiger Woods was voted by his 
peers as llie PGA Tour player of 
the year Thursday after setting 
new standards in major champi- 
onships and money, and provid- 
ing unforgcttalde shots along the 
way. 

It was the third time in the 
, past four years that Woods won 
the Jack Nicklaus Award, the 
. most of any player .since the 
, award began in 1990. He earlier 
won the PGA of Arherica player 
of the year award, which is 
based on points. 

Tour members selected Paul 
Azinger for comeback player of 


the year after 
he led all the 
way in win- 
ning the Sony 
,Open in 
Honolulu, his 
first PGA vic- 
tory since he 
was diagnosed 
with lym- 

phoma in his 
-n- j shoulder in 
Tiger Woods 2993 

Michael 
Clark, who won the John Deere 
Classic, was voted rookie of the 
year. 

.On the European tour, Lee 


Westwood was voted player of 
the year for a season that includ- 
ed six official victories, and two 
great finishes in Spain to win the 
money title and end the seven- 
year reign of Colin 
Montgomerie. 

Woods, 24, had what arguably 
was the greatest season ever in 
golf. 

He won nine PGA Tour events, 
the most since Sam Snead won 
11 times in 1950, and earned a 
record 59,188321 to win his third 
money title in only his fourth full 
season on tour. 

He. also shattered Byron , 


68.17, and won the tour’s Byron 
Nelson Award with an adjusted 
scoring average of 67.79. 

Woods became only the fifth 
player, and the youngest, to com- 
plete the Grand Slam when he 
won the British Open at St. 
Andrews. He also joined Ben 
Hogan as the only players to win 
three consecutive professional 
majors with his thrilling PGA 
playoff victory over Bob May. 

Other nominees ytere Phil 
Mickelson, a' four-time winner 
this year, and Ernie Els, who won 
the International and became 
the first player to finish runner- 


Ijlelson’s scoring average with aipint^eestrai^tmajoreT 


Garcia paces Williams World Challenge 

THnn«.\wim\v'c /Au. ^ ! — . . ... 


THOUSAND OAKS, Oilif. (AP) 
- Sergiu Garcia is gelling a jump 
unllie2001 season. 

darcia, who failed to win in IG 
PGA Tour starts ihis year hut has 
played e.xiremely well in made- 
for-TV evenis, shot a 7'*inder 6S 
Thursday lu take the lead in the 
Williams World Challenge. 

“I’m really, really looking for- 
ward It) next season,” .said Garda, 
who had an eagle, six birdies ami 
u lone bogey to forge a. one-stroke 
leati over playing partner Vijay 
Sitigii. 

The 20-yearolcl Spaniard was 
particularly accurate with his 
• irons, leaving hinisdf close birdie 
! chances most of the round. 

“1 still mis.sed a couple of very 
gooii birdie putts. I’m hitting it so 
close, that 1 e.vpcct to gel birdie 
opporhmhies, ami whenTddn’t 
make them, I don’t get frustrat- 
: ed," Garcia sjiid. 

;. Liist week in the Skins Came, 

; he birdied nine of IH holes in reg- 


More golf scores - 
Page D3 


and accuracy off the tec, leaving 
him in better po.sicion to hit his 
irons. 


uiation. And he beat Tiger Wood.s 
in their "Battle of Bighorn” duel 
in late August. Singli birdied the 
final three liolc.s on the way to hi.s 


Tolies shoots 65 
at PGA Q-school 
LA QUINTA. Calif. -Tomlny 
Tolies shot a 7-undcr-par GS^'on 


66. Davis Love III was another I Thursday to take a one-stroke 
shot back with a 67. >, lead over Perry Moss after the 

Wood.s, lto.st of the 12.p]ayer second round of the PGA Tour 


tournament, was tied with .Fred 
Cotipiesat 68. , ’ 

Garcia rolled in putts of 3, 10, 5 
and -1 feet during his birdie streak 
as he flni-shed the back nine with 
a 4-under 32. 

"My dad has l)cen working 
with me on my putting,” he said. 
•T’ve been trying to'keep from 
closing the face when I take it 

back?' r: 

Garcia also'crcdited his recent 
improvement to a change in the 
driver and the balls he is using, 
saying he is getting more length 


qualifying tournament. 

•Tolies, a four-time runner-up in 
. six season.s on the PGA Tour, had 
a 16-under 128 total. He played 
P(3A West's Jack Nicklaus 
Private Course on Thursday after 
opening with a 63 on the 
Nicklaus Tournament Course. 
Moss shot a 62 on the Private 
Course. 

The ioxv35 players and ties wiU~ 

earn 2001 PGA Tour card.s, with 
the winner getting a full exemp- 
tion. Tlie next 50 - or the nearest 
to 50 with ties - will be exempt 
on the Buy.com Tour. . . 


Glider takes lead 
In' senior Q-school 

LAKE BUENA VISTA. Fla. - 
Bob.Gildcr shot a'&uqdcr-par 66 
on Thursday to take an eight- 
souke lead after the third round of 
(he Senior PGA Tour qualifying 
tournament. 

Gilder, a six-time winner on the 
PGA Tour who turns 50 on Dec. 
31, had an 18-undcr 198 total on 
the Eagles Pines course. He 
opened the 72-hole tournament 
with a 69 and shot a 63 on 
•Wednesday. 

Terry Mauney (67), Jim 
Hoitgrieve (68), Tony Peterson 
(71) and Bill Holstead (75) were 
tied for second at 206, and Mark 
Hayes (66), Doug Johnson (67), 
Jim White (68), Bobby Wolzel (70), 
-Tom-McCinnis (71) and Kurt Cox~ 
(74) followed at 207. 

TTie low 16 finishers in the 72- 
hole event will receive 2001 tour 
-cards, with the top eight gening 
full exemptioas. 



This 1968 file photo shows Browns', place Wcker Lou Qroia as he warms up'Irt _ 
In preparation for an NFL playoff game with the Los Angeles Rams. ' 


Friend, foe remembers i 
‘The Toe’ for kicking feat§ 



No. 1 Sooners neeid 
one more win fortitle 


BEREA, Ohio (AP) - Lou Groza 
was more than a football player 
to Cleveland Browns fans. 

“The Toe” lived his life the 
way he kicked the ball: strai^t 
on, and right through the 
upri^ts. 


Jackie in the car bearing vaqliy 
license plates “TOE 3.” ■* ' 

“He was a special guy,”'said 
Browns Hall of Fame tackle Mike 
McCormack. “He was the spirit 
of the ClevelandBfowhs.” 
Today’s Browns are reminded 


Giuau, ii Hall'of'Fain’e'krckef • oF Groza every day 


Kansas State could 
end Oklahoma’s 
run with upset 


By Richard Rosenblatt 
• APFootbafl Writer 


Philadelphia's Hugh Douglas' sacks Cardinals’ quarterback Jake Plummor Nov. 
19 In Philadelphia. Plummor was knocked out of the game with a thumb Injury. 


Cardinals’ Plummer 
lauds new coach 


TEMPE. Ariz. (AP) - Idaho 
native Jake Plummer, who will l>e 
— back_aL-Slariiiig.quar.tcrback- 
Simday for liie Arizona Cardinal.'; 
after mis.siiig a name with l)nii,'.ed . 
ribs, >;;iys lie wants the interim lag 
removed from coach Dave 
McGinnis’ title. 

“I’d like to see it happen,” 
Plummer saiti after Thiirstlav’s 
practice. ;‘l think it will. I'm imping 
it will. Yon can see the resjK-ct we 
all liave for coach McGinnis. I like 
him asalieadcoach. 

“It would l)e nice if he could get 
• it done now and have tlie offsea- 
son to work on a lot of things and 
■ get ready for it.*’ ' ' ' 

McGinnis was promoted from 

^deIeiiSlV(:.Lmirdinutur-co.imerirh— 

coaril when Vince Tobin was fired 
.seven games into the ,seast>n. Since 
liien. Aruuiia has sputtered to a 1- 
4 record iind is .{•«) ovenill. But the 
fiery McCiimis lias luid to field a 
team decimated by mjurie.s and 
sitort on talent-to Itegjp with. 

McGinnis said Pliumner, wlio 
pnictiCed for the second day in a 
row, will start at Cincintiiiti on 
Sunday, 

"I;>ke's practiced both dtiys. 


Once again,__riie Big 12 
Conference title game can crush 
the national championship 
hopcs.of the best team in the 
league. 

If No. 8 Kansas State (10-2) 
beats No. 1 Oklahoma (11-0) 
Saturday night, it will be the 
third time.in.ihe league’s five 
years that the title game robbed 
the Big 12 of a rfational title shot. 

■ And there’s a bunch of Big 12 
coaches who aren’t happy about 
it, including Nebraska’s Frank 
Solich. 

— ^^If-they-didn-t-have-to-pluy- 
another game, 'they would auio- 
matically be. in the national- 
championship game,” Solich 
.said. “We’d have a representa- 
tive there. If they end up losing 
the game, they are not in the 
national championship bowl. 
Neither is Kansas State.” 

In 1996, the first year of 
the Big 12, Texas upset /“ 
No. 3 Nebraska 37-27 and / f 
prevented the / /. 

Cornhuskers from playing f ‘ 


sacks, drew a penalty, for the — matically be- in the nat 
fourth-quarter incident that championship game.” S 
S""* 'ai'l- "We’d have a repre. 

ad< ed BuIfal,,sSh.i,m.B^^^^^ live there. If lliey end up 
ilteIJin.s.sidehne. , the game, they are not i 

nriKik,., who nearly sacked R„h „a,ional champion.ship 
Jnhns.m before getting tip and Neither is KiinsasStaie." 
nimiing down Bryson aftera sliov- igor ,t,„ v/.-.r nf 

el passgained 17 yards, was penal- ,i,i Rf-TiS” V . 
ized on the play for unnecessary 3 Nebr.aska*37 27^a^nd 

rongl,ne.,s. Sapp went ever to a p°evenled U e 

talile to grill) a cup of water while ^ t 1 t , • 
officials were discussing the penal- rSin ^ 

■ty onliriHiks. ' 

-Reporti-Salarycap— 

fines system set overtime loss to Texas Co[lege football 

.NEW YORK - An agreement 4&M and fell from u 

Ixitween tite NFL and tJie players ‘“■‘‘i 8 

union reportedly will allow the , . "ducats would like C 

league to fine teams up to $3.5 mil- • more'than to beat 

lion and two firsi-miind draft picks Sooners, who defeated \ 
for violating the salary cap, • Kansas Slate 41-31 Oct. 28 
USA Todiiy reported Thursday. Manhattan, -Kan. But 
thtii the agreunieni was reached Oklahoma quaruu- 

liist week to increase the maxi- Hcupcl mu.st be 

mum fine for cap viohitions from -Mopped, 


and offensive lineman, died 

Wednesday night of a heart 

attack at age 76 - fittingly the 
number he wore for most of his 
21.scasons with the Browns. 

“I don^t know if he’s the great- 
est Cleveland Brown, but he is 
THE Cleveland Brovin,” said 
Doug Dieken, who played 14 sea- 
sons at left, tackle - another of 
Groza’s positions. “Hu exempli- 
fied w"hat you want in a football,’ 
player. Lou -always had time for 
everybodjf. I’m sure every kid 
that sent a' football card to Lou 
Groza got a Lou Groza card 
signed and sent back. He was just 
a big, lovable guy.” 

Groza had been in failing' 
health in recent years. Stricken 
-with Parkinson’s disease, he had - 
back surgeriLlast.year.and.two_ 
Oklahoma defensive back Michael operations. - 

Thompson IhU op dofonilvo eoordP . On Wednesday night, he had 

eyooni Cn«n.. jusr finished having dinner with 

Stops aftor thoSoopom yj, ^ ^ 

Aftm Nov. 11 In College country club when he collapsed. 

*09- Efforts.to.revivc.him-cnrouteio — 

ith -1 dntv I? 7 w; Southwest General Hospital in 

onL loic"'- 1974. was the quintessential 

In Knncn Bfown, more so than even Jim 

le Kansas State wil Brown. Even after retiring in 

sisninneK^n 1967, Groza, an Ohio native and 

mpionship . Series .father of four and grandfather of 
'”^‘1 '“."v."'’™'.. ■nede his home in the 

touid the Wildcnls Cievcland area. 

, they would li^kely Groza relished his role as an 
' in the Fiesta Bowl, ambassador for the Browns, and 
was a fixmre at home games and 
m^e Sugar Bowl; alumni events. He attended the 

The-game-will-be HairdrFam"b"induciiohs each 

played outdoors for year, driving to Canton with 


at work. Upon the team’s retuni 
to. the NFL last season, the new 
Browns honored him by renam- 
ing the street in front of thdr 
Berea training facility “Ldu 
Groza Boulevard." ■ ' 

The facility’s address: 76 Lou 
Groza Blvd. 

Flag.? were lowered to half-staff ; 
on Thursday at the site and tJw 
Browns will wear No. 76 on the 
back left side of their helmets for 
the rest of the season. .. . 

Groza played with the Browns 
from 1946-67. He retired ds the 


franchise’s career scoring leat^ 

- a distinction he still holds - wuh 
1,395 points. He was an AU-Pro 
’tackle six times and was selectril 
the NFL’s Player of the Year in 
1954. 

_ .Using.a.straight-ahead lacking- - 

method that’s rare in today’s 
game, Groza, who also wore No. 

46, transformed the art of place- 
kicking and h&lped make Idckm 
more of an offensive weapon. 

-College football’s top kicker eaih 

year ip given the Lou Gro?a 
Award. . 

In 1950, Groza kicked a 16-yard 
Held goal with 28 seconds left-io 
the NFL championship game to 
help the Browns beat the Lbs 
Angeles Rams and win the title 
in their first season in the league: 

“Pressure didn’t bother 1^ at 
all,” said Browns Hall of Fame 
quarterback Otto Grahani, 

Groza’s teammate for 10 years. 

Groza, the last of the “ori^nal’? 

Browns to retire, played in 2!G ‘ • 
games and nine NFL champf- 

o nship games wi th the BrowiJg, 

■^o won three titles during t^ 

1950s and another in 1SG4.' 


nator Mike S^oopt after the Sooners 
beat Texas ASM Nov. 11 In College 


beat Texas aSM Nov. 11 In College 
_Statlon, .Texas. ^ 


closed with a shaky 12-7 win 
over Oklahoma State. ; 

The stakes couldn't be higfijjr 
in this rematch: Oklahoma plays 
for a chance at its first AP 
national title since 1985 with a 
win, while Kansas State will 
clinch its first Bowl 
Championship . Series 
game with an upset. 

II Should the Wildcats 
r / ' win, they would likely 
/ play in the Fiesta Bowl, 

/ leaving the Sooners to 

play in the Sugar Bowl. 


" the first time, with a 
■*— sellout crowd of 
8(},0(X) expected at Kansas 
City’s Arrowhead 
Stadium. 


Coach 


back Josh Hcupcl mu.st be 
.stopped^ 

■“"'obviously, we re going to 




end’s 31-7 loss to tlie New Vork 
Giants, remains questionable «-ith 
a sore left sJiouJder. If Bro\m can’t 
play, Chris Greisen will be 
Plummer’s backup, Greisen 
played briefly last week, his first 
NFL action.' 

Plunimer sjiid he' can still feel a 
twinge in his ribs when he throsvs 
. on the run or twists his hips. He 
said he won’t let' it keep him fn>m 
scrambling, ' 


itmo lt|i," .McGitmis taiiil. <™il..i„. I tto itotv.t|tttpi.T til.,0 , .OBVlOUSly, wo'ro gotitfi to 

I'ltittttttoi'slitttkitti.Uave Brown »illi '•‘>mmt.«itttncr Patti Ttielialiuo Imve to play tnucit betliir titan 

ittoflMiivo itiliBstnrlurErwJSk: ii;'!; l«ton <tnipo>t-crai tovai.vpcntJ-it we-tltd-tn the tntliul iBitimt,” 

ofiftv ^1.7 ince ri„. Kj iz_i. clul) exccutive for up to one year Kansas State coach Bill Snyder 


^ No. 1 Oklahoma (minus 
2.5) vs. No. 8 Kansas Slotc 
— NoborfyVpCTfcctrrrKANSftS^ 
STATE. 31-28. 


foV violating the cap, currently 
562.5 million. 

"Tlie level of sanctioas needs-to 
be strengthened,” said Gene 
Upsluiw, executive director of the 
NFLl’A. 


Ravens’ Lewis faces 
new allegations 


NFL fines Sapp $2,500 
for taunting Bills Sunday 


defensive uickle Warren Sapp w;is 
fined $2,500 by the NFL on 
Ihtirsday for entering Buffalo'.s 
bench are.i for a drink of water 
and taunting the Bills during the 
— Bucaincc rs ' .H -l'T-vicniry Sundtiy: — 
The 1999 defensive player of the 
year, tvho leads the Bucs with 13S 


BALTIMORE - Two women arc- 
suing Baltimore Ravens line- 
backer Ray LewLs for 56 million, 
claiming he struck them during a 
brawl in a aowded l)ur last year. 

'D ie wom en, r-rtrire P.-irki-r .in/t 
Eritku Ury, a. .used Lewis of 
as-sault and battery and irifliaing 
emotiomil distress and are seeking 
52 million on each cotmt. The law- 
suit wa.s filed Wcdnc.sdav in 
BaUfmore County Circuit Court, 
according to DwigJit Pettit, the 
)TOmcn’s attorney. 


-we-uio-m tlie initial 'game," • 
Kansas State coach Bill Snyder 
.said. ■“! don’t think we could 
make a lot of wholesale changes 
defen-sivelyrWe have to do what 
we do.” 

In the first game. Heupel 
threw for 374 yards and two 
toucliduwns and ran for a score. 
Kansas State quarterback 
Jonathan Beasley, meanwhile, 
scored three TDs but was only 
14-of-36 for 211 yards with two 
interceptions. 

Since then, the Wildcats 
scrambled to a 10-2 record. 
There wa.s a 26-10 loss to Texas 
A&M;. a.teanr tharnearly boar •; 
Oklahoma before losing 35-31, 
and dose caJIs against Nebraska 
(29-28) and P^ssouri (28-24). 

The Sooners followed their 
-win-oveiJCansasIStato^ith-a — 
dominating 31-14 victory over 
Nebraska, then beat Baylor, 
Texas A&M, Texas Tech and 


^0. 7 Florida (minus 9.5) vs. 
No. 18 Auburn 

Gators shooting for sixth SEC 
tide since 1991. ... FLORIDA, 31- 
24. 


Army (minu.s 2S) vs. Navy 
• C!adcts have one win; Middies 
none. ... Army, 21-20. 


Western Michigan (minus 63} 
at Marshall 

Broncos set to take MAC tide 
away from Thundering Herd. ... 
WESTERN-MICHIGAN, 27-24. 


— -UNLV (minus 7) at Hawaii ' 

Warriors try to avqid nine^Ioss 
season after nine-win season in 
•99. ... UNLV. 34-21. 


ContlnuBd ftotn 0l — r 

Corbet sold the Idaho school had 
no information on the matter. 

Koetter, 41, has been named 
Big West Conference coach of the 
year the past two seasons. The 
BrorrcorwenrS^'this year, won 
(heir second straight league 
championship and ore set to play 
in the Humanitarian Bowl on 
Dec. 28. 

Broadcast and newspaper 
reports earlier in the week said 
Koetter had been offered the job, 
but that he had not made a deci- 
sion. He had been motioned as a 
possible .candidate for other 
openings, including .Arizona 
State, Arizona and Southern Cal. 

In addition to Koetter, Phillips 
interviewed Western Michigan 
coach Gary Darnell, Dallas 
Cowboys assistant and former 
OSU assistant Les Miles, and for- 
mer Oklahoma State quarterback 


and dsjsisfant eba^ l^kc Gundy.'.' 

Koetter took over at BoiSf 
State in 1998, leading the Bronc'|)f 
to a 6-5 record his first seasom 


TO a rccora ms nrst seasom 
Last year, they went 10-3 and 


boat Louisvill e in the 
“Humanltarlan'BowL TTr 

Koetter also has served as 
offensive coordinator at-Texas-El- 
Paso, Missouri, Boston Collegb 
and Oregon. Oklahoma coaq^- 
Bob Stoops said he considerct} 
hiring Koetter as his offensive 
coordinator when he go’t the 
Sooner job in 1998i .,;i 

When Simmons’ resignatiod 
was announced Nov. 6, Phiilipi 
said the department could put 
together a financial packa'gd 
worth upwards of $700,000 pbr 
year. 

Simmons was forced out aftei( 
six years. He had a record of 30- 
38, with one bowl year and fiwj ' 
losing seasons. t z. 


Last_wcdK_lQi(siniigbt);-6-S L 

(vs. points). I 

Season: 185-53 (straight); 123- I 

102-3 (vs. points). r 


Catch NTOTi ^aate^ uTaaylnThe^ 
' Tiitias-Naws spoils sieciron. ~~ 


y 




Friday, Dtcemter 1. 2000 Tlmat^ltwi, Twin Ftlb. Id^ M 


Your.S/wlsIJat . 


Adults 
hold up 
i juniors 
in no-tap 

Thim-dghi teams showed up for 
the “Shot The Turkey - Ate TTie 
Whole Thing - Adult/Junior No Top 
Tournament” last Saturday at the 
Bowbdrome. 

This nvmth it was the adults’ turn 
to roll 8-pin no tap trfiile the juniors 
rolled 9 pin. The adults had to hold 
up^the juniors this dme, and that ih^ 

I . Nino adults rolled 300 games an^ 
r .-twootiiers had two 300 games. Those 
with two perfect scores were Skip 

t k.;Crisiobal and Leslie Wheeler. The 
■other 300 rollers included: Jerry 
Moses, Kristy Rodrigues, Sam 
.Wormsbaker, Jody Bryant, Art 
.-•Brown, Eddie Chappell, Dirk 
F^MeCallistcr, Bob Lcazer and Stan 
J:;SeiT. 

Division A, where the junior 
"'bowlers were eight years of age and 
_ rounder, the "Alley Katz," DcAnne 
Massie teamed up with Ijct son. Cole, 
they roDcd 1377 to win the first 
place spot. T he "Komo’s", Jerry 
Moses and tLingK. 


YOURS CORES and sta ts Boys receive martial honore 


VO IXEYBALL 
^Mca volleyball 

'^{S2b-»A 

aS" 

iWyOirtM 




Grey Chadwick, left, Sergio 
Mendoza, center, and Jose D)jiez 
of Jerome 





r 1 




ly, were first 
ih 1,652. “Rod 



champions in this 
:mvision finished third, the "Lazy 
'A.'s”. Lisa and daughter Danielle 
^enat 1541. 

, The CKvision, 12 through 14, win- 
ners are "The Moro’s”, Niot Moravee 
.^d mon, Karen Morano at 1,732. 
"Shane Rackham and Auntie April 
Lecson war second with thdr 1,716. 

Th dr team name was "^p". 

The older Uds, Division D, 15 and 
older was won by the “Oh,- Nuts” 
of Skip and son, Bob &inobal 
•jMoth 1,629. The "1^ Oernne" team 
fU Jim Boehm and tott Olson took 
second place spot with 15%. 

, Plans are under way for the format 
-of the next Adult/Jutuor Tournament 
Dec 16. Entry forms will soon be out. 

‘ -ifcrc’s on update on a couple of 
our past junior bowlers. 

— -QeliQ>Lopezisinherthirdycarof' 
studio pursing a medical career at 

_ WoshingtonStateUnivcrsity.Shcisa. 

.substitute on a men’s bowling league 
canyiiig a 202 average. She us also a 
member of the university bowling 

_.^t«un. ^ 

' Jerenty McQUoR isin his first year 
’at DeVry University in Pho<^ Ariz. 

So fiu- to season his average is 207, 

Ihlgh series 732, and he’s rolled a hi^ 
rgtme of 266. 

I ..JJere ore more results from the 
Idaho State Senior No Tap Satellite 
Tournament. It was a record brew- 
ing year with 89 entries. 

, First place went to Ginger Smith 
and James Hanson from ^ise with 
r,719. Second. was Ken Courtney and 
Fbi Hose, both Twin Falls, for thdr 
1,709. Third went to Mircya Messner 
obd Ken Richardson, Nampa, 1,645. 

JVing for third place was the Twin 
Fidls team of Jessie Biggersiaff arid 

_Maury_MilleE— Sam_and-Mary 

.Voorhees, Grandview with 1,633 fin- “““ 
Ishcd fifth. 

The team that finished sixth with 
1,623 probably might have had most 
fun while bowling. Judy Brennan 
teamed up with Pete Mulkcy, both 
Twin Falls. Judy entered the tourna- 
ment with a 142 average and rolled a 
,707 scratch three game scries. How 
bowM had no bearing on the 
fact that Jim Knisc, also bomng, was 
betting q_uarters on the game. Jim 
in with a 199 average. 

-•' A little further explamition on.lhc 
contest between Jim and Judy' ’Ihese' 
two are pan of a group that you can 
-fipd every Sunday.moming at the 
Bowlad;eme, with quarters out and 
challenges abounding. I understand 
[hat Jipi was prtyiarcd t»gct his 



d you. 


money back last Sunday. 1 
Jim? 

••‘Seventh place was Jim DeVries 
and Jim Kruse, local bowlers, 1,617. 
Eighth was Chuck and Thalia 
Nottingham, Kamiah, 1,597. Dave 
flid Durec Alien, Nampa, captured 
with 1,610. Dean Lewis and Bill 
^cho, Idaho Palls, teamed up~for 
ti&th place, 1586 The lo^ team of 
Con Moser and Mauiy Miller wnllied 
di^with eleventh pmro at 1,^. 

• "A 1,567 for Carla and Kent 
. Hanson, Montpelier, was twelfth. 
Also in twelfth place was Pat 
— hb£onnaglyandBrnoeWhitson fiuui 
Salmon. Th< Boise team of John and 

g n with 1564 finished four^ 
niruUng out the prize fund 
Twin Falls team of Bud 
and Con Moser with 1561 _ 
prize fund for tho-No-Tap~ 
fas$lj)6a 

{ Conaa Thdim Tbctar or 733-43S7 
^^ffTKiUa^ttuckaiSTTv^miuDm. 


l|«c 

JiuElinSAi 

t£nlS!crStetm 

in./MsFMin 

UUCH 

SmSTmOnMnn 

- 

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aUK>Jwir;Hite' 

bM9un2iainai 

»&ll>flcn»i 

HOUBnra 

StK19M<n«aUS. 

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MSrtA'** 

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Ca sh Allowance APR Financing '^ 

. On all n ew Ram 1500 pickup.s. 

Mothers love it. So do dad.s, daughlers. and third cousins twice rcmtnx'ti. .And 
no wonder. It’s the longest lasting full-size pickup on the road lodas. ' .And It, comes 
with the prodigious power of an available mighty MagmwfV-S. So. is it any wonder 
that over ibe past four years, more than one million households h;i\c switched to Dodge 
. - f'j“tfc-’'-But.ihaiiap te expe(MM--Anyj.hingJp>:smdj^^^^ approve. . 


You could save ^3,098:' 


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Business EfSlon Virginia S. Hutchins 733-0931, Ex/. 242 


Page D-6 


Friday, December 1, 2000 


The Times-News 



A Held of opportunity. 



Briefly 

inMoney 


Jerome chamber fund-raiser starts today 


Tho Tlmw^ewi 


U.S. Cellular moves, 
donates to charity 


TWIN FALLS - The U.S. 
Cellular retail store in Twin Falls 
will celebrate its move (o' a larger 
location with a grand opening, rib- 
bon cutting, food, prizes and a 
• donation to The Salvation Army 
today.- • 

The ribbon cutting is set for 11 
a.m. today at 799 Cheney, Suite B, 

, in Twin Falls. The ceremonial rib- 
bon will be made of $20 bills, 
which wi.ll be donated to The 
Salvation /Vrmy in Twin Falls fol- 
lowing the event, the company 
said. . 

U.S. Cellular also will collect 
nonperishablc food and new toys 
d. ring December for The 
Smvation Army’s Christmas gifts 
to underprivileged families. Those 
who bring in 10 cans or boxes of 
food or a new, unwrapped toy to 
the retail store in Twin Falls or 
Burley may als o reque st a free 
activation on cellular service, the 
company .said. 


JEROME - This is the business 
community’s weekend to play 
host for the holidays - and hope- 
fully gather a nice budget boost. 

Jerome's 2000 holiday home 
tour - now in its tliird year - will 
feature six country homes 
dressed up for the holidays 
around Jerome County on 
Saturday. 

The tour and tonight’s auction 
will help fund Jerome Chamber' 
of Commerce operations 
throughout the year. Last year’s 
event netted more than SS.OOO, 
and c. imber leaders hope to 
exceed that amount in 2000. 

Here’s a preview of the tour 

• Wes and-Lcslie-Mortin’s- 
home at 803 ISth Avc. £. will be 


ablaze with thousands of -lights 
and candles. Leslie Martin plans 
to display three Nativity scenes. 
She«uses candles and greenery 
lavishly 'all around her house. 
This year, she'will have a large 
ardfidal tree in the living room 
beside a crackling fire in the fire- 
place. 

r Mike and Annallsa Thomas’ 
two-story brick at 400 E.'Ave. A 
has a flat roof and balcony and is 
reminiscent of an i^ban condo. 
Annallsa Thomas was raised in' 
the Philippine Islands, and dcco- '; 
radons refiect the customs of her 
native land. She is from the 
southern provinces, where it is 
. too Vrtum for fir trees to ^ow, so 
other trees are used for 
-'-Christmas - and decorated with 
green and while paper. 


Jerome’s 3rd Annual Traditional Holiday Home 
Tour and Auction . 


T bo homo tour Is set for 1 to 5 
p.m. Saturday. Tickets may bo 
purchased for $8 each at- 
Arlene‘8 Flower Garden, Farmers 
National Bank, Jerome Floral, 
Rosebud's Florist. Jerome Public 


will feature- fesUve exterior lighting, as 
well. 

-To- kick off the tour, downtown 
Jerome merchants win put on an auc- 
tion and wine tasting today at El 
Sombrero Restaurant. 143 W. Main In 


Library or the Jerome Chamber of Jerome: Music and food will be at 5 
Commerce office. p.m. The 11^ auction starts at 7 p.m. 

Tickets win show a map of the For (nformation, call thb chamber at 
tow's route, which for tho first time ' 324-2711. 


and ‘Vhere the decoradons 
up on the tree is where they 
stay,” Jearuiie McKay said. 

• Leonard and Rosemary 
Peny, at 35 Canyon View Road, 
built their large, two-story home 
on the canyon rim recently. The 
main feature is the breathtaking 
view of the canyon and Auger 
Falls. 

• Tim and Debi Hunt bought 


the historic stone Falls (Mty 


• Jim and Rhonda Arbaugh's rope, fabric, cranberry beads. 


School building at 295 E. SOlMl . 
The school closed its doors In 
1970 and sat abandoned until 
about eight years ago, when the 


big farmhouse with wraparound popcorn strings. Olher'small^r Hums b^^'t it and*startedi^{>^ 
N. 2M W., trees are ih other rooms, one rt’a-"* vations. Although they have 


will have greenery and colorful 
li^ts drap^ around the railing. 
The Arbaughs go all out at 
Christmas with several trees. 
There is a large one in the living 
'roofh,'which the children' deco- 
rate with traditional dccoradons 


■ rooms, 

ttiring Indian life. made the school into a home 

• Todd and Tcannle McK nv’s with f nnr j 

house, at 135 N. 200 E., is a child- baths, they have tried to keep 
centered home. The McKays' ' •••.•• — 

include their children in the dec- 
orating as much as possible. The 
youngsters decorate the tree, 


the historic feeling. They 
retained the original distressed 
doors, wood and all 24 8-foot win- 
dows. 


, Western business 


New Jersey company 
■ Snake River Cheese 


buys ! 


BLACKFOOT - The Snake 
River Cheese Plant is joining a 
consortivun of factories that make 
Italian cheeses for a New Jersey 
company called ' Supreme 
Specialties. • 

Suprema bought the plant 
-Wednesday from Idaho Falls busi- 
nessman Frank VanderSIooc, a 
day before Beatrice Cheese, which . 
had been operating plant, was 
scheduled to leave. ' 

VandcrSloot, who also owns 
Melaleuca, sold all of his interest 
in the plant to Suprema. 

“My_bus|ne.ssjs .Melaleuca,.and . 

that's what 1 need to pay attention 
to,” he said. 

VanderSlout took over the 
chee.se plant in 1994 when local 
dairymen asked him to take con- 
— trol-after-Kraft-Foods-vacated- 
ihe building. They had operated 
in the factory since the early 
1920s. 

Kraft manufactured its brand of 
Parmesan cheese there butmoved 
that into. another facility out of 
state. After trying to produce on 
their ow’n. dairy farmers asked 
VanderSloot to take over the 
plant in 1994. 

He later brought in Beatrice 
Chee.se, a subsidiary of ConAgra. 
Beatrice manufactured its line of 
Healthy Choice Cheese in the 
plant for one year, before reneg- 
_inu_on.iiS-threti:year_lease_with. 
VanderSloot in August. 


Discrimination verdict 
against Re/Max stands 

DENVER ^ Re/Max has again 
lost its bid to overturn a 5300,000 
race discrimination verdict in 
favor of a Colorado Springs man 
who says he was denied a fran- 
chise because he is black. 

— A- t hMie-^ud ge -ptHHrl- 


U.S.' lOth Circuit Court of 

Appenis.unnnimdusly-sided-with. 

Edward Tyler, who won a 
SlOO.OOO Judgment, plus attor- 
neys’ fees, which may total as. 
much as 5200,000. 

In February 1998, a jury 
agreed Re/Max had intentionally 
discriminated against Tyler on' 
the basis of race. Englewood- 
- based -ReJMax-Intemarional Inc.' 

- one of the nation’s largest real- 
estate franchise companies and 
with operations in the Magic 
Valfey - appealed the decision 
but was denied a new trial in 
August 1999. 

. The court of appeals recently 
upheld that decision. ‘ * 

Re/Maxhad"aTgiTedYrrcourt’ 
-thartt-denied-Tyler*s-application~j 
because the Colorado Springs 
marker was glutted with Re/Max 
franchises. ‘ 



VIP Pass 


goes on - 
sale today 


The TTmes-Newa 


Peter Metcalf, pteildent and CEO of ntountelneerlng equipment manufacturer Black Diamond In Salt Lake City, holds a sheet of medium-sized cams 
before they are seperatod Info Individual pieces and burnished. It’s a subject of dJipulo which private company makes the world's most carablnere - 
-essential climbing aids In a booming worldwide sport.-- : ^ ^ — 


TWIN FALLS - The state says 
it has a gift idea for the outdoor 
recrcationist on your shopping 
list. 

, The Visit Idaho Playgrounds 
Pa.« goes on sale, today.- ■- - 
Tho VIP Pass covers day-Use 
fees at about 100 recreation sites 
in Idaho. It’s available as^an 
annual pass for $69 or as a five- 
consccutivo-day passifor $10.1.' 

Purchase online at www.ida- 
horcc.org, or call 1-800-847- 
4843. 

“The VIP Pass is a convenient 
option for paying day-use fees ht 
a variety of recreation sites 
throughout' Idaho,” said Celeste 
Bccia, tourism specialist with the 
Idaho Department of Commerce. 

“If you hike, Nordic ski, visit 
state porks or participatcin / 
water sports you’ll want to con- 
sider purchasing this pass." : 

Sites honoring the VIP Pass 
include all state parks, Craters 
of the Moon National 
Monument, Park ’n Ski areas 
and select U.S. Forest Service, 
Bureau of Land Management 

and'Burcau of-Reclamaiion day- 

use areas. A complete list is 
available at www.idahorec.org. 

Scvccalystate and federal 
agencies participate in the pass 
program. 


Outdoor gear makers swarm in Utah 


The Associated Press 


SALT LAKE CITY - At busy 
factories in the Salt Lake area, 
Petzl America and Black 
Diamond Equipment both claim 
to churn out the world’s highest 
sales for carahiners, (he essential 
climbing aid. 

The cordial rivalry - business 


is booming for both - makes this 
a capital for corobiners, the 
metal oval ridgs used to fasten 
ropes. It also Idghlights a thriv- 
ing Salt Lake trade for outdoor 
gear in the tradition that built 
such gadgets as foldable “spy 
skis” for parachuting Navy Se^ 
in the mid-1980s. 

Salt Lake C ity, hosts— the 


Outdoor Retailers’ shows, where 
the world’s specialty shopkeep- 
ers buy goods. Local companies 
sometimes outnumber vendors 
from any other U.S. dty. The city 
Brigham Ybung founded as a 
religious enclave is becoming a 
haven for worshippers of snow 
and steep rock. 

^With.Pccz]-and.Black-Diamond— 


leading the pack, Utah’s urban 
Wasatch Front communities have 
more than 50 companies produc- 
ing outdoor gear and supplies. It’s 
a concentration that makes Salt 
Lake a bargain hunter’s dream. 
Shoppers can count on factory 
and retail sales, and finding qual- 
ity gear at secondhand shops and 
PleastrsetrOEAftrPagrDT — 


Region cools, 
but economy 
remains good 


Tho Asaoclated Press 


SPOKANE, Wash. - Idahbjs ■ 
hot. Washington is lukewarm 
and Oregon is a laggard when 


Income drops for first time in nearly two years 


Tho Aasoclated Press 


WASHINGTON - Consumer 
spending rose in October at the 
weakest pace in six months while 
Americans’ incomes actually 
declined for the first lime in 


ment reported Thursday, provid- 
l—ingfresh-evidence-that-the econ- 
omy i.s .shifting into a lower gear. 

The Commerce Department 
said that personal incomes fell 1^ 
0.2 percent last month, reflecting 
a big swing in fedenil payments to 
fanners, while consumer spend- 
ing edged up just 0.2 percent. 

Economi sts worr ied th at th e 
'weakness m the consumer sector ' 
could intensify if Americans sud- 
denly become more cautious in 
their spending habits because of 
the volatility on Wall Street. 

Stock prices fell sharply on 
Thursday,' reflecting continued 
investor worries thar the slowing 
economy will further erod e cor. 
poriiteprofits.- 


Personal Income 

Hero Is a look at Amoricans' 
. personal Incoma. 

$8,<OlnBion — 


Cuneitl 

Ona nionOi spa , . . 
One yaar ago ^.86 


Hllllll 


Personal spending 

Hofo l3 a look at tho nation's 
personal sfwndlng. 

SeaaanaUy astruifotf 

JO.SOIrOhjn— • 



NO J:MAMJJAS0 
1889 2>0O 


Source: Dfitrtmtra o/ CcKTvrMAca 


' AP Saum- I of Convn«re« 


■ Compiled from staff and wire reports 


— The Dow Jones industrial aver- • 
age finished the day down 214.62 
at 10,419.49 after having been ‘ 
down more than 300 points in 
"afteMOOn'tnjdmg. The techriolc>~ 


gy-hcavy Nasdaq lost 108.95 to 
close at 2,597.98 -n Ioss of-50 • 
percent from its record-high of 
5^048, 62'back on March 10. 

The hug e runup in sto^ prices _ 
in recent years hu been a major 


force behind the noar-dccade 
long economic expansion, pro- 
pelling consumers, through the 
wealth effect, to boost pur^ses. 
. In another sign of economic 
wcoktitss, the Laoor DeportTnent 


said that the number of laid-off 
workers filing new claims for 
unemployment benefits rose to 
358,000 last week, the highest 
level in more thaii two years. 

Merrill Lynch economist Stan 

_SJUi>leyja|djjoblesijJaimsJia^ 

been rising for a number of 
months, consistent with his fore- 
cast that job grmvth, along with 
the overall economy, is slowing. 

The 0.2 percent rise in con- 
sumer spending in Octol«;r, the 
smallest increase since a similar 
rise last April, reflected a steep 
2.3 percent drop in spending on 
durable goods, items such as 
cars, expected to last three or 
more years. 

Joel Naroff, head of Naroff 
Economic Advisers in Holland, 
Pa., said the fact that consumer 
spending has been slowing since 
August was a “real worry,” but 
he said it was too soon to say 
whether the dropoff will be per- 
ipanent. — ' - — 


“It Is unclear whether this is'a 
temporary pause caused by dre 
problems and sky-high gasoline 
prices or a true- trend toward a 
more conservative consumer," 
he said. 


It comes to economic growthT 
bankers on a panel forecasting 
the region’s economic future 
said Thursday. 

The forecasters think 2001 
will bring a slowing of the 
economy - both regionally and 
nationally - with employment 
growth occurring below the 
surprising rates of the past 
three years. 

Jack Beeb e, sen ior vice pres- 
:UtIeni_anH.ditectot_o£_research_ 
at the Federal Reserve Batik 
of Son Francisco, ond.John -W. 
Mitchell, a U^S; Bancorp econ- 
omist, were featured speakers 
at the annual economic fore- 
cast sponsored by Inland 
Northwest Partners, a nonprdl- 
it Spokanc-arco economic 
development organization. 

Their conclusion: The 

region’s economy, reflecting a 
national trend, probably will 
' slow next year, but still will, be. 
good. 

Generally, semiconduetdr 
manufacturing and computer- 
related manufacturing contin- 
ue to lead economic growth!in 
the region, which has experi- 
enced 'detUnefi~In“naWraV 
-rcsourccs-bascd. • sectors, 
Mitchell said: 


Foreign competition and 
bumper crops h^ive faiprt- 


Please see ECONOMY, Page 07 


w - I'i*. 





BjEST AVAlLABtt cpPY 


. ►^fldiT.Ow^fJ^aOOO Tlrn^Nm, Tirti F«Ib. Jdito ■ 0-7 


Money 


;—7- — ^ — ^ - • • , iVlUlNfcl 

• Qv^st sales practices 

' ''^^»SrraLt?e- "■“- 

a.mpmiytrfllMtperaissioa '■ ' ■ 


iiirartj piauice 01 rnang. 

ing a customer's lone-distance 

i,l:nTT‘® have companytrithoot pemiLioa " 

launched an investigation “inio , Denvo'jased Ov^ which ako 

cSutSa^'^nif* •'.P^'^y^Jo'^ii'SSservice^ 

phone rampa- ; much Ihe^aglc'Valloy m 
,<^oniia'isbdng'Sweiigau^^ 


|‘’:HeK9d,aoo6 
!.;JIL CLOSE... 
; j y i^gr« , 
MET change' 
; j*iw.o ;,' 


Hi(3H;2.mi.7s 
'' lOVt TJSTiM . 
' RECORD KIO>^, 




■:■ ^ny that has provoked ^ens of thou- 
, sands of complaftits frbm rOsi- 
V^deiUs who*dalra‘tbey )vere billed 
•. yfor. services they didn’t prder'or 


AUGUST »EPTEMBER OCTOBER NOVEMBER 


Gatcw ay wampig 
prompts selloff ' 


YORK (AP) - WaU ^fteel 
..'./Kcoiled Tbursdayfrom fears that ' 
worw pay be yet to come for' 

. .rumings tod the economy, mth 
the battered Nasdaq' composite - 
index sinking at one point to' 
more than SO percent off its 
. record high dose. - " 

taBsplh, t^^ed ty PC ‘ 
maker Gatevra^siwaniitig of dis- 
appoiming holiday^sales, also' 


□own more thanaOO points o^ore 
a final-hour rebound cut losses.' • 

. It was the'second heaviest track' 
mg*tiay ever,fot’’both ihe New 
YOrk" Stocfk ^Exchange and' 
Npdaq Stock Market. 

,“The finand^'aarkets today • 
- are sending a strong'signal that 
, -^.lyorries about the economy and 
.•earnings are inttosifying' ... that 
’.w'e may'be headeci-itoward a 
recesyn^^y^^^|ycjin^ ^ , 


Hugh Johnson; a chief invest- 
ment officer at First Albany 
Corp'. "The good qews'is'that 
«ockS-are getting’ down to levels 
that arp arguably fairly' valued.*! 
■•'Thursday’s selling, whidh' 
spilled over td the rest of the mal'- 
, ket, was directly related'to 
Gateway’s announcement date 
Wednesday that its holiday siles 
^jrere weaker than expected 
I the Nasdaq dosed down 109.00 
at 2397.93, a‘4 -percent loss.'Eixly •' 
in the afternoon, the index fell as . 
low as 23123.04 - about half its 
March 10 closing 'record of • 

5,048.^ The'Nasdaqi whidi'liM 

fallen In nine'out the last ses- 
sions, is trading at its lowest lev- 
els since earlj? August 1999. It 
also-' lost 23 perctot of its value 
during November.' 

Standard & Poor’s 500 index 
feU|^.98,to ^14.93 


New Voni< Stock Ex;,tiaijge 


.'. The. probe by* the California 
Public Utilities Cotninissicni comes 
, as state officials move to step^p 
enforcement of telecoinmimica. 

. tions frand! In’Jhl/.'the’-PUC 
Joined with the 'state attorney gen- 
, end’s office in a lawsuit accusing 
, WorldCom's MCI unit of slam- 

Gear 

coRtkiMdfmbft ' 

• qiganized swaps." • 

' ^ome of the gear sells big over-' 
seas - skis' in Norway, packs in 
Japan and climbing hardware 
.--from Europe.to Austtalia-Otber- 
equipment caters to a particular 
use, such as fat yet supple skis for 
' Utah’s powdery' slopes. 

Salt Lake Is riding a market for 
. outdoor gear t^t topped $5 bil- 

• - lion last year ;aDd Is ^growing 
'Steadily, according ’(O'Outdaor 
Retailer, a trade group.' * 

• It’s the golta-have. die-for gear 
'that keeps many Salt T.alfp com- 
paiU« busy, from Evolonon Ski 
Ctx’s handcrafted skis - an evolu- 

EcOilomy I_ 

Continued from be; 
erS across the region. ‘ 

Grain farmers in Washington 
state are getting low prices for 
their crops because of foreign 
^competition. Idaho potato grow- 
ers harvested a'record crop that 
js ^ving down pripes. 

CDsts^affect- 
Lrt-r-.‘ -''-‘- -ji' 


Market Summary 


,,v‘ Y» uiB iwHRtc vailoy, m 
I ( ^OTT iia'Isbein^inrestigaud for 
• d a mm ing and aamndng - tbe'iSro 
most common 'forms of phone- 
fraud. Cramming,’ is udding 
charges tto’customer'tihone bills 
- for products.oi*!servle<ifAcy did 

; ^er p^ 

. I'lQi^’spokesraah'MiUt Barken 
.declined to 'comment on the 
■ of California probe. 


Qwest se^^^ces. • • , • • ' 

“(Slamming and cramming) are 
the kind of bnsincsB practices 
that ‘coildone in any way," 

■ ‘jBarkett said. “Slamming Ls a very 
'• serious issue, andwe hire agencies 
who lake it seriously.. In the past 
y^ar, we have terminated more 
, 25 agencies for slamming” 

' Stale regulators said they began 
I Cocusii^ on Qwe^I earlier tli» year 
; aftCT,'hearing from consumers at 
public meetings and reviewing a 
surge in complaints against the 
company. ‘Tlie I'UC said it ' 
received more than 40,000 com- 


received more than 40,000 com- 
•JhLSCi plaints, against Qwest from 

ad^^ senMrfaonJammng January ihrouch Mnrch of ihis 
measures to reduce vio^btions at year. - 


tion from its spy-ski start - to 
Voile’s -unusual combination skis- 
snowboard. v % - . . . 
•Black Diamond sold 2,000 of 
• the innovative if maudlin 
- “Avalung” breathing devices for 
surviving avalanches in the first 
year it marketed the 'product. 
_ The company !ost‘six employees 
to avalanches before it hit'bn 

• the idea from a Colorado physir 

dan;"' •' V ^ ..\ 

^ack maker Vortex uses a'pro- 
prietary way to mold dense foam 
■ to fit the contours of a hiker’s 

• back and'hips for'snug suspen- 
sion. With a clean design, the 

• packs add such nice touches as 


' ing aluminum’makers'in Oregon 
,• and Washington, aswell as manu- 
facturers*and shippers through- 
■ out the region. ■ ' ' • . - •••'• 

'Technology and productivity 
gains nationally are expected to 
keep inflation at bay. Beebe said. 
Economic growth will be in nor 


ii,M ™g(>j^ bt^ Tvon^'t^haye man 


thumb-size ruhber zipjwr pulls 
and Kevlar thread - each .strand 
can withstand 110 pounds of 
stress - for fabric corners. .A 
molded sheet of rigid p<jlycarbon- ; 
ate replaces sag-prone aluminum ■ 
frames in stronger packs. 

Company owner Bill Crawley. 
35, can’t make packs fast enougli 
to satisfy retail demaml, hut he’ll 
• reli.packs at wholesale prices mit 
the factors dimr. Every January 
Vortex sells slightly blemished 
goods for even less. ' 

A glance e.isi from downtown 
Salt Uke City m.ikes clear why 
the city has aliracteil m. mans 
gear makers. 


"positive surprises’* thlii h.ive 
marked recent growth vears. he 
said. ‘ 

With its booming cniitpiiler 
• chip. Indusiry, Idaho' is the 
region's gnjwih leader in employ- 
menf, population and personal 
income, 'ilitchell said. A strong 
.5flB'>9!?PW‘?\OLuidu_stry_uff;,L-ts 


. The most common crxmplaint 
Involved imauihorized billings for 
Qwest’s $7.95-per-month*(j.Home . 
plan and its Q.World pjaii. whicli 
costs 5i per month.- Most oTthe 
complaints came from customers 
who speak Spam Ji and rVsian Ian- 
guagts, die FUC said. 

California’s investigation is. the 
latest in a string of state actions 
targeting the compuny. lEight 
other states have sued Qwest for- 
slamming violations, and.the 
company paid $1.5 million in 
penalties it) seiile a federal slam- 
ming prohe earlier this year. 

■• In thill ca.'-e, federal reguJaton. 
uncovered evidence’that some, 
customer consent forms contained 
forged signatures. • 


Tile 1 1.000-f(K)t WusiUcli Range 
towers over the city and provides 
some of the world's finest skiing. 
The city is gearing tin for the 
2002 Winter Olympics, It's on the 
doorstep of the Great Basin 
desert .and only hours from 
redrock canyons, making the 
environs ,i vast outdoor plav- 
ground. 

It also is a major rail and air 
trans;xmatioii Imh fo'r the West. 

■'It's hard to imagine a major 
population center better than 
Sidt !.jke." says Rock Thompson, 
who makes clittiliing hardware 
“Vou can gtrskiing. rock climbing 
and sailing on tile siime day.” . 


Weaknesses in the agriculture, 
f'-rest ptoiiucts and food process- 
ing industries, he s.cid. '• 'i 
Idalio. 'uliidi is blessed with'a 
budget suiplus, should see a 3.'.s 
percent im Tease in employment 
next veai ( .ill.ceiiter.s', which 
employ 11. (KH) people in the state. 

willcontrihute.-Mitchell said-.--.-.— 
'iV • .. . • ’ 
















04 T1m*»^ewi, Twki FaJli, Idafw Friday, 0 


Clos ing 1-ir ruREs 


Uw Oom Oimt 
. B.M B.75.-..7#- 

iai 40 142. S4 ..14 


}UJJ?MJI~}3I.TS ms .3 

S«p 3M7i . 243 2393 S 241 7S .2 7s 

-0»C— 24B23-232 5 24B-rSI.75~%2JJ~ 

U»i 2S7.7S 2«0 2S7.7S 2M .t.7S 


Aua ' U.U 6400 

~ b? n^'u? “S**?!**' '*"*** •— U B.WMt- 

xs!sxsij„ 

’ Sugar Metals/ 


NEW YORK (AP>-S>4whiUM MMng on vw N«W 
. 73 VoniCcRM. Su(^MCOOUE«en«no*Thir 

.23 ' 11U00b*3emp«rb 

.3 Uor 894 9.9S 882 ' 87J" -.ld' 


!a.ji'ii‘n£& •”-- — I^SiirST-OfiferS^cllSCOUTlt- 

W«d.-l<lpMlnl3J8S p I A -f— * ^ 

.metals/currency- tor best saiety records : 


• S3 eOYBCAS”^ 

• 02 S.OOO bg nMrrun; car 

•20 Jtn 4992S 509 5 


• 0* M 52225 52S 

• 05 Aug 520 52* 

- Sao 524 5 527 


Balietad»port398a3pnca».TrMiO*Y. ['I 

HiroKongim: 32*0.93 on Slog 
^ndan momrg lixno: *207.00 on | 1 . 00 . 


MY Hardy 4 HaniMn laOncwM wtcnaroad. 

MV CtiQanAid I2702I irKTaroad. 

W EroaluR) Uorcaiad t2B3,n mViargad. 

NY UaiC. |M tool merin TNu; 1270. 1 0 lO 1170. 
MYKSOCOantUSAadm. TTu 3270 JO 31 00 

NEW YORK (AP) -Fiauraa tiadno enirw NY Uarc 
T>K»adar 

__ ^ 9*®» C7^ 


LiVESnXXIK 


20010 273 50 209 50 273J0 .3 70 
372.10 37500 273.10 375.00 <300 
77030 370 70 270 20 27550,^300 


12.50 28500 .140 

207.20 .3.40 

— 209.40 <140 


Wad tcwnri I39.4l7.ui 

SOTBEANUEAl. 

lOOCinKdalanpaffen 

Da< 191 00 190 00 

Jir tM7Q 193 so < 

War 103 50 189 50 i 

May 1*3 80 185 30 1 


... Grains 


WHEAT 

5,000 burMiun. can 
' Oac 3M 315 5 

Uai 328 329.75 

May 13* 33*25 

Jul 143.75 144 5 

Sap 350 5 352 


WHTE WHEAT ' 
8.000 bu rnnrrun; oma 
Dk 302.5 193 5 

Uai 307.5 307 5 


paabuaftM 

310 5 313 .2 

325 5 327 25 .1 5 


Cheesi-i ' 


TWIN FALLS- TaM>F4talMaiacaCo<iaT>ta«rCo nauco 

Faadaruaari unda'400M.t87.*no.400li>500. Jar **0 0 

50. Ma> 4800 47*0 arcs 

&0Ola7O0t».*83S0-*9O.70CM»0O(>*.t«|. Ma* 475 0 4*>a aran 


10 700 A» . 160-t**. 700 M 800 M . *7* 50-1*1 » 


NEW YORK (API - Haroy 4 Hannan awar Tbuiuay 

54 8*0.t«t002a.FaCflcaiad 15 383. UD 10 023 
7714 iwytirfso bu!«r put* tel ajlvai n London M *3 on 
10081 _ 

London lata a<Na'l4 **o.t«SO QU) 

«*. »* 10 015. Fabnoalad 15 378, t« 
NT Man: a4»af locamonm TTnaaday *4 874, up |0 050 

NEW YORK (AP) - Sf« ronlancua maial pncaa 
Thuradty. 

Aiianaiuin • ea.l tana pai W. , UYWm Ualal E«n. Tiio 
Ccpoai - 190 0 Camcda piaia U 9.aauaiab«ia 
Uaitif4RTN< 

Znc - 53 31-53 *S CMa b . OaUMf ad 
- OciO - »eO touoy <U . Handy 1 Harman (oYy oaay 

55 

• 1270 10 Kfy or . NY Man aox TNi 
S4va<.l4«80KandyLHaflnan laYyd^Quaa) 
Sm> • 14 *7a ucy or . N T MaiCipctTbu 
Marcuiy - tllOOOpai 78«naaa. NT 
Platmun. 15*4 00-1*02 00 »oyet.. NY. Inrlracl) 
Platatun-MOlMMycr NT UarpapolTTv 
A q -no qu«ad. n a -nca a.aJaOJa 

NEW YOflit ( AP| - Kay curianty axtraMa raraa 
TWiday. coiTbaiad la laia Waotaaday 

Exra^nao P««Cay 


Cent CaNaa and laadaa at* ttaaN 

fiawdtySalt-Nor.11 
Daby ta>vn 125-1*1 
Sunadtatm 11(51240 
H0>t4t 131-142 
Goait 120182 50 

Mcya •aanara, 111-129. Uadaia. 13*111. laa. 14 

.snaap laaoaa. 143 10.18*10. b!a 181-1*410 
tuaMngaaaa. 120131 araraaaa 11742330 


CnadiUi cAMia prcaa wi ma Cntaj 
04'taN 10900.. a200.40«dundCh 


•reari tc'<no 3 37 luo 1|. orata^ w< 


aai2 96.|dc>wi tl.bann 103- 
lyl. 14 pa'CtN tpnnga 22 (uO 
I2'30a(up7ioup5j 
«-i1 ewi 3 82 (iiaarTyJ. Oartay 


P(yi'ATOE,S/ONION.S 


Uabc I uppai valty. Tarry Fai vOurWy ountii. oa<<v- 

Rdtleat Otmar* tairiy gocd. aicapl U S 2* Unt. 
iqri. maAal aboF ttaady lluual Nonwun and Rutaal 
Ourbara US I 2- «r 4-c7 rywimum baiad 5 10b 
maOiutki par carl non i.rad A 40 paiuw 5<r rare. 

■ nun 7 50-800. oaawrulyioaai. Ctiadl lO-b'-tm- 
bagi8 50-7 00. cccaMrtaby Ngr«’ and Orf'. Caiad lO 
5« matMtclu 9 lO-'O 00. odCtNenaiN lotr. uud 
kin'^IOOb"®' * 

m«m l*» UI44 1 50 50 C «jnoin pa' c-1 40«8 00- 
7 00,mo»iN6S0-7 00, It- n.jftr. 50a 800-7 00 inotl- 
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70s 7 00-8 00. 'notlt, 7 50-8 00. 80a 8 OO 'm 8 M 
otcatbftaltylagna'.OOaOOO laar* 50-900. oceitrtn- 
a'V hrgnan, 1 00a 6 00. <«<• * $0 0 00. eteatbnary n^n. 


JE710UE • P/Odoeart Lrtatioa Uai>at<x) Aaaooanon 
■n JafCma raporta tna toacianq pncaa Irvn ma -- - - 

uu naldWaO>*aday.Noa 29. ^ 

Top apnngar lt.590 
Top 10 tpnngt'* *1.530 
Top 50 ipnAgtra 11.420 

Top 150 apnnga'a II 240 
Frtinnarfaa i900-ti.2X 
CJoanna.N't 400lo5CCt>a. Il3(tll40 50010800 

bt .1113-1125. 400 to 800 tn.lM-l 100 

SianadnorlaicaNas llOfrUOOhatd 
Adatncadconi^nmaciioiDte 8 100 naad ol 800 b 

ROC*T£tAO(AP|- tdanoFaimOuctau InttrmoMniam 
irvaaioe* raport ior Thuraday. 

LIVESTOCK AUCTION -Uano Ftla Livatiock on 
Vladnaaday Ul*tyandcoAma<Cbi(maa320O'3a00 • 
baaMyNada'aiaaitOSOO^OO.I^laadaitiaart ' 
8*00-91 0O.POcMrvaa<i9300-lC«OO MniiKauam 
lasdar Uaart 75 00-9000. naaay holaum uioti ata«n 
«r 00-74 00. notitm ipnnga' xarar* 1.530 iProOuttn 


82 00. Lgni •aada' narNN 84 00-90 00. uotitar hbian MaicaniA 
8800->0400.aucKcoiaa4V>-87qi>].s>ciacoaaMr> 0 

MM a n 4 -aaryar paga na. I4adar itfl«a 84 00-78 00. UOMT fi* 


Fossil fuels 


Mbaronaparewidal’dNdiaouna 70««<ni70O- Agg 87 

.....4<n4tn fifiO lOOcwmiaoO.pa'O-lWdconpnNd'apiani 70 Snp 07 

.inat4 40.4 50 eourl 7 00-7 M, I W count 700-7 50. pa. c«.i Cc*s.40d Oct 8* 

Noikcui't 70couni 800-700. lOOcoumOOO 700 Ntr 

'Mm lOb'cmeagNcn Siif Apa'cvl Data Wadsaai 

ngpruiwCiKagoOoa'O NtnpunaO $0-7«. pa'C'HCdiO'aaoNoAdiantS 50. Wad a on 
_ • OOO.paieynWcKont.'.NarteiiiyaOOO-Too HOOfi.LEA 

7? tJig .. HduydiadaUS I tua Apa'cnt lOObaacM- 40 000 ba. 

Wrtecnvn ?OO.eOO,MnratouN DakcuHoundfladi Oac 53 

Ir w < 8 00-8 60 faO 54 

lu »7a« "*?' ;iv»»*i»USl SObcaronaWapyrygionirpOragiyn Apr 5$ 

W Jrii»8 Na'«Ci»M70ePuni310-*00. 100counl3 50-4 (5o. j^n 01 

^ 2'H25 2 75 <Miad 10 b l.imoaga nor a.ra A Wain./ygion and 2ut « 


cymt*" ^ c^, 

40.000 ta; earn par t. 

Oa« 75 11 72 42 7190 75.a7 .02 

Fae 74 07 74 50 7385 74 05 -10 

Apr 7530 75 42 7515 7540 . 0* 

Jun 7225 72 57 7220 75 2 7 ®* 

Aug 7240 72 85 7752 75 80 . 10 

0« 74 05 74 21 74 05 7A» .13 

Oac 74 75 74 85 74 75 74 85 

Wadt»aiai2i.3«2 

Wad 'a opar nt 135.971 up 2 *42 . 

FIEOEflCATTlE 

8a000 b4| caaai om b. 

Jan 09 10 *947 (*85 **q7 ,jj 

U4r 8*35 4*85 8*10 **20 - 30 

A«< *092 *4 25 8780 8802 - 23 

«4y 0772 64017 4755 4775 -20 

Agg 4 7 40 4*15 *7 75 4 7 05 -i* 

Snp 0700 8*00 874$ 9772 -» 

Oct MOO 4000 8780 8780 - 17 

'JJY ■ . 8810 • 15" 


Fao 31M) 3190 » 73 lij* .» 

War 32 4} 3243 31.71 ^90 -H 

Api. 3170 31.75 3100 3190 - 57 

^y 3080 » 90 30 20 3020 -54 

2!® £'® »» •» " 
2H- 2*’ -*» 

AvO noo 2890 28 34 2134 - 45 

^ 34 30 2430 2745 37 83 - 44 

Oct 3744 3784 3742 2742 - 32 

ISr 22 22 -M 

Dae 2700 2700 24 42 34 43 - 34 

Eti MMa 143.985 Wad'iaaiaa 170419 
Wad a (P«y mi 4*0372 9 *49 


FaO 9745 9250 9735 97*0 .1! 

>«a» 9100 9)50 9100 9130 •! 

Apr *480 8730 $520 8130 .1 

M*r *335 4331 8015 Kl5 -14 

Air 79 80 79 80 77.71 77 75 .14 

A4 n 40 79 40 78 4 5 78 4$' -.C 

Aug »30 78M 7590 T$DO -14 


Sm 77 80 7750 78 14 78 

Oei . .. .. . 74 

Ok ■ ■“ 

Cal. *ai« t7.443Wad a uwatO 759 

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CHICAGO (AP) - The 

nation’s leading automobile 
insurer Is revising its pricing 
policies and giving the biggest 
rate breaks to drivers of what it 
finds are the safest cars - pri- 
marily luxury cars, Ivans or 
SUVs. 

State Farm said the new sys- 
tem, which will replace its 
across-the-board discount for all 
vehicles with air bags, will 
result in no more than a $50-a- 
year difference in insurance 
costs. Owners of sport utility 
vehicles and other big cars will 
still pay more for their insur- 
once than smoll-car owners do. 

But announcement of the 
change still provoked immedi- 
ate criticism from consumer 
. safety experts, who said It’s' 

- unfair to drivers of smaller vehi- 
cles who may not be able to 
afford large ones and are more 
likely to be hurt in a crash., 

Imani Khayyuh, a Chicago 
motorist who drives a sedan 
that woul dn’t q ualify for_the 
biggest dikount, also was dis. 
pleased when informed of the 
plan. ' 

“I shouldn’t be penalized for 
• driving a sensible car,” she said. 
Bloomington. Ill.-based State 
Farm said its new pricing pro- 
^am, which discounts the med- 
icoi portion of coverage by up to 
40 percent, accurately, reflects 
its safe^ data. It will cut rates 
for vehicles that generate the 
fewest injury claims for occu- 
pants. 

Along with some larger mod- 
els, including SUVs and pickup 
trucks, big autos such as some 
Acuras, BMWs, Mercedes- 
Benzes and-Jaguars also fall 
ider that category. 

“This is not about big cars 
and little cars, it’s about safer 
cars,” company spokesman Dick 
Luedke said. “Cars chat pro- 
duce the fewest injuries are the 
typo of car you shouldn’t pay as 
much to insure.” 

Experts said other insurance 
companies are likely to follow ’ 
Stat e Fa rm’s lead. Mike 
Trevjno, a spokesman for 
Allstate, the second-biggest U.S. 
insurer, said it instituted a simi- 
lar rate structure about a year 
ago. 

But because the medical por- 
tion of coverage typically 
accounts for only 10 percent to . 
20 percent of the total premi- 
um; the change isn’t likely to 
have a huge impact on policy- 
holders. 

“We’re talking about a dis- 
erect and limited aspect of the 
overall coverage,” said 
Christopher ,'Guideite of 
Insurance Services Office, a pri- 
vate New York company that 
provides actuarial and statisti- 
cal information to insurers. ' 

Insurers already .consider.the.' 

likelihood of a crash or tlieh 
when setting comprehensive 
and collision premiums, 

Npw_a_relaied. but .different 

consideration is being applied 


to medical payments coverage; ' 
Luedkesald. 

State Farm has for years 
given discounts of up to 30 per- 
cent for vehicles with both dri^ 
yer and passenger air bags, 
discount is offered to dwners;o^ 
the portion of their premi'ujii 
covering personal injuries {d 
occupants. 

Since all new cars now hjiv^ 
air bags, State Farm dedded-Jd 
base the rate discount on whlidi 
makes and models generatotj 
the fewest injury claims froin 
accidents. Those vehicles' will 
receive the biggest discount, 40 
percent. Vehicles with aif bags 
that offer the least protection td 
occupants will receive 20 
cunt discounts. These vehicles . 
tend to be smaller, like the Ford 
Contour, Chevrolet Cavalli^S 
and many popular Japanet^ 
models. y-Z » 

Those in between will receive 
a 30 percent discount. , * Z 
J. Robert Hunter, director d( 
insurance for-ihe Consumed 
Federation of America, called 
the new pricing plan unfair tij 
most drivers. 

“If I have a tank. I’ll get the 
biggest discount,” he told The 
New York Times. “But I’ll be 
smashing into people, killing 
and maiming them at a much 
higher rate than if I were in a 
smaller car.” ' 

Research has shown that light 
trucks, including SUVs and 
pickups, are more likely thaii 
cars to kill the other driver in a 
crash. Trucks tend to weigh 

more, sit higher and have stif& 

frames than cars. 

"State Farm sees no reason to 
increase its insurance f^es for 
the liability portion of coveri 
age, however, because lbs 
database shows that largQ 
vehicles are involved in fewer . 
crashes. 

“While it is generally true 
that when a big car hits a little' 
car it is going to inflict' more 
damage, what we have found is 
that accidents involving bigger 
. cars tend to be less frequent," 
Luedke said. “So the increased 
severity is offset by th» 
decreased frequency.” , 

The discounts, which go into 
effect Jan. 1, will be applied to' 
about half the 37 million cars 
insured by State Farm - 19B4 
and later models, according co' 
Luedke. The air bag discount* 
will be phased out for 1988 'to 
1993 models. 


Something mlsslnl;?'; 

W e am able to customlm our . 

martlet report to match rrodic*; 
era*. Intaresta. tf jfou’ra Intemstad-ii 
tn a stock ormutual fund that'sjiot;: 
In our report, Just can us and a ^ 

try to Include It. 

^ thow requests, or any other 
Cestlons about ImpnMng the . 1'.^' 

'Morwy* report, please caO RanjprC* 

J(X)es8t733t)93L Eid.262. 











FRIDAY THRU TUESDAY, DECEMBER. 1 - 5, 2000 


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T 


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pri me minister outlin^ peace plan; elwtipn campaign starts 

Minister Enud ^trak offered the Worid In brief *" Aristide^was r«lected with an eVng the age of conse. 


TEL AVIV. Israel > Prime 
. hEnister ERiid Barak offered the 
' most detailed description yei of 
his peace plan, saying Thursday 
he tybuld recognize an indepen- 
dent Palestinian state but would 
"put off the explosive issue of con- 
trol over Jerusalem. 

Two months of violence has 
derailed peace talks, and Barak is 
now facing early elections, proba- 
bly in the spring. The prime min- 
ister said he was prepared to 
work toward a political .settle- 
ment ns soon as the violence sub- 


would not change his approach to 
peace negotiations, though many 
analysts .say he's unlikely to win 
re-election unle.ss he can negoti- 
ate some sort of peace deal 
before the balJot. 

Bethlehem cancels plans 
for Christmas celebrations 

BETHLEHEM, Wesr Bank - 
Bethlehem’s city fathers have 


lucm .!> .MKJii us uic violence suo neinienem’s city lathers have 
sides, but his pro|)osals did not ■ called off ambitious plans for 
ap[)ear to contain any new offers. Christmas 2000, saying a time of 


.The Palestinians said they 
were not interested in partial 
solutions, ami showed no enthusi- 
asm for Barak's propostils. 

Barakk-Hiid the liKiming election 


Palcstinian-Israeli conflict is no 
time for merrymakihg. 

Tlie town of Jesus’ birth will be 
dark and deserted this Cliristmas 
- without festive street lights, 


craft fairs and choirs in Manger 
Square. 

^ “In view of-the veiy bad situa- 
tion we arc living in, it doesn’t 
make sense that we celebrate 
while there ore still closures, and • 
so many people have been 
killed," said "Tony Marcos, a 
spokesman for the munidpaliiy. 

Festive street lights still hang- 
ing from last year's celebrations, 
when thousands of visitors crowd- 
ed Manger-Square, remain 
unlit. 

Russia will raise sub 
due to radiation worry 

MOSCOW - The . sunken 
Russian- nticlear submarine 
Kursk will be raised frorq the 
Barents Sea next summer to 


IcsMn concerns over a possible Aristide was re-elected with an 
I - ovenvhelming-92-percenrof the- 

a^saidThu^ay, vote, the electoral council 

Deputy Prime M nister Ilya announced Wednesday,- giving 
Klebanov, who heads a govern- the final taUy for a contest boy- 
mem commission on the Kursk cotted by all major opposition 
tragedy, said the reactors pose parties, 
no immediate danger and will Runner-up, Arnold Dumas, had 
rcmmn safe for at lemt 10 years. just 2.4 percent of the vote in 
But we need to raise the sub- Simday’s elections and the other 
marme. because nuclear rcac- five candidates garnered even 
tors l^ng on the. seabed ... in a less. Candidates have three days 
busy fishing area, would be a . to cohtest the results, 
constant source of international 

Sf ° lowers consent law 

for homosexual age 

Haiti declares lylnner In London - .After three 
presidential elections Uefeels in the House of Lords, 

PORT AIT PDiMr'c U - Britain s Labor government 

rOKT-Au-PRINCE, Ham - resorted to rarely used powers 

pormer Pr«trt(»nt T»»r,.nnni--,r,>4 -n.. j_.. I w , , 


U -J T « r fcsoried to rarely used powers 
Former President Jean-Bertrand , Thursday to pass legation low- 


ering the age of consent for 
■ homosexuals from 18 to 16. 

House of Commons speaker 
MichaerMartin said he was 
invoking the Parliament Act to 
force through a Sexual Offenses 
Bill that makes the age of consent 
the same for both homosexuals 
and heterosexuals. ' 

It became law after being 
given' Royal Assent by Queen 
ElkabethIL 

Lawmakers in the House of 
Commons overwhelmingly 
approved the bill earlier this 
year, but ^ House of Lords this 
month rejected it for the third 
time. 

The bill brings Britain in line 
with most other European Union - 
nations. 

-compiled from wire r e po rts 




1000 SPRINGS 



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Discountho Private Group Packages 
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• FRESHNESS & QUALITY Check out our fresh salad bar and grand buffet 
CONVENIENT location and parking • CLEAN Our Re.staurant Passes Any White Glove Test! 

TAKE OUT ORDERS WELCOME. 

— 735 ^lire takes Blvd; N; • Tv/irrf allr'*'734-6578 ~ — -OpiifDiiJyT 1 55^9 

- Friday & Satufdov 'td 9:30 




Fr1da7;t>K«iitwrl,3000 Tfan^m, Tiiln PtOt, kUw E-3 


-9 HioMn (uppiy 

14 Thoma* 

■-■ EtS*on 
• 15 Vm 

,-',15 KMpIrom 
■ happtnlng 

' ' 17 Slaapino- 
sickness 
'spreader 

>'i;t 19 Dispositions 
. 20 Portion ol 
bread 

. 21 Put In studies 

•*> 22 Skedaddle 


. V, 27 Hot tubs 
31 Bamboozle 
' 33 Spectacles 

35 *_ Bravo* . 

36 Singer Shore 
38 Arousers 

'• 40 Hits the Jackpot 
42 Topped the bill 
r.. 43 Ssmt agents 
45 Poet Jonson 
' , 46 Alarm bell 
48 Ship's pole 

«6-£ndsipertner7— 

. 51 Hit the load 
; . 53 Altar vow 
• 64 Moke a reouest 
56 WWII sub 
C' ' 58 _ New Guinea 
v:; 61 Places 
MAldsIn ■ 
wrongdoing 

66 Formal dance 

67 Twol^ 

68 Doles (out) 

89 Scottish Island 
70 Catch sight ol 

DOWN 

1 Night flyer 

2 *Kldnai^>ed* 
author's Inits. 

3 *Z* co-star 

- 4 Part ol NLCS 

5 Condse 
summary - 

6 Biology or 
•cology. e.g. 

7 Hospital wing 



8 'LA. Law* CO- 
- star Susan 

9 Showed up ' 
-10-AekMw(edget — 

11 Talk baby talk 

12 Secreted 

13 Meese and 
McBaIn 

16 Liquid taste 

21 Sacked out 

22 Or. Lear/s 
i drug 

23 Ucoricelike 
flavoring - 

25 Most on edge i 

26 Like a thief In I 

the night I 

28 Sleep | 

29 Scatterbrain ‘ 

30 Hefpl 

32 Rachel or 47 

Simon 

34 Bmish knights 50 

37 Sword end 52 

39 Rends 55 

41 Booth ' 57 

42 Movie channel 58 

44 Full-house 

latters 


□OBEi ruDDoa □□eoll 

DQQQ ODOiaEI DaElllll 
□□EiDQinBiicia Eiatsall 
□Qia oBDo ainciciBDll 
EiDEiQiaia BBiaiao - 11 
QraDODQQll 
SSBSI* nOElB DDDClII 
□BOD] □□oora bbeibII 
doqd DQina raQciiaE]l| 
□Dtiiaaari EmBo II 
EnaoDEna 

BagBIlD BBBB (a[DQ|| 
□□BB DBlai 3 BnQBCID|| 
BgBB OI3EIC1B □□Qa|| 

aiann OBnaia onniall 


59 Lincoln's 
nickname 
50 Stroke gently 

61 Network ol 
*Sesame 
Street* 

62 Ridge Boys 

63 Ooze 
54 Foxy 


Definition of ‘mortgage’ 
should spark discussion 


- The word “mortgage" traces 
back into Norman French to 
something very nearly like 

!*death pledge,!liiuuio doubt.you 

suspected as much. 

;; According to an insurance 
-• researcher, the worst drivers 
■ among women are those taught 
:: by their husbands. 

Canada’s City of Quebec is 
more southerly than Seattle. 

Q. Who said. ‘Time is money”? 
A. Who but Ben Franklin? Did 
I mention he was frequently over- 
drawn at his bank? 

;• Report is Ae typi^ child actor 
«. has to audition 49 times to get a 

I first job. 

Item 226SA in our Love and 
: War man’s fact file: “The rhinoc- 
•' eros, mates for a half hour once 
. every two years." 

Q. Where docs Uic violin tank 
- /bn that list of musical instru- 
'4nents Americahs most prefer to 
[ '.play? 

; A. No. 8. Between No. 7, trum- 

• Jwt, and No. 9, harmonica. No. 1 
: :Js piano. No. 2, guitar. No. 3, 

^rgan. No. 4, flute. No. S, clarinet. 
•;No. 6, drums. Saxophone is No. 

• 10 .. 

• New York City's Times Square 
'first was called LongacreTSquare. 

-• Never can tell what little thing 
: /might inspire some sizable ere- 
_ -ation. A shirt on a clothesline - 
; Vlisbter-than-air craft. ^ spider 



What’s 

WHAT 

LM. Boyd 


web across a garden path • the 
suspension bridge. A whistling 
tea kettle • the steam en^ne. A 
^ging lantern • the clock pen- 
dulum. And you know about 
Newton's applet 

Longevity isn’t enough. The 
Pied Piper legend had been 
around for a long time. But it 
, took Robert Browning’s lengthy 
verse about it to make it famous. 

Q* Where’d wc get the term 
‘OldGuard’’? 

A. From the first so called, 
Nai^leon’s Imperial Guard. One 
of history's many elite troop units 
that never had to face western 
airpower. 

A perching bird has flexor mus- 
des in its legs and leg-long ten- 
dons. They fist its claws when it 
crouches. That locks it onto ^e 
-limb. Can’t fall off. 

A student of contentious 
behavior contends many a man 
who smokes cigars does so 
because his wife doesn't like the 
smoke and he wants on excuse to 
get away from her for awhile. 



TheTiiiies-ISews 

Classified 


Museum to_ 
honor civil 
rights hero 

• MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) - H 
wsu a cold evening 45 years ago 
Friday when a Montgomery city 
bus stopped in. front of the 
Empire Theater. The driver got 
up and told black seamstress 
Rosa Parks she would have to 
give up her seat fOr white passen- 
gers; 

That event - wdiich touched off 
the Montgomery bus b^cort and 
began the modem civil rights 
movement - is recreated iriside a 
new museum honoring Parks, 
■^e museum opens today on the 
site of the old theater. 

Montgomery when Troy State 
University Montgomery dedi- 
cates the Rosa Parks Library and 
Museum. 

Joining Parks will be such dvil 
rights figures os Martin Luther 
King III, president of the 
Southern Christian Leadership 
Conference. 


; . _ Morning brea k 

-Treasure HUNT — — 






V r -V .'D ' 





Birthday? Time to reassess that relationship 

IF DECEMBER 1 IS YOUR | 1 c,^,i „i„ ^ 


IF DECEMBER 1 IS YOUR 
BIRTHDAY: New approach to sit- 
uations, relationships is'neces- 
sary. January and Onober of next 
.year will be romantic, profitable 
months. Leo, Aquarius persons 
play major roles in your life - 
could have these letters, initials 
in names: A, S, J. You travd more 
than most persons, are sendmen- 
capable of expressing yourself 
in poetic manner. 

ARIES (March 21-AprJl 19):- 
Temporary setback will 
boomerang in your favor- 
Maintain aura of mystery. Don’t 
all. Don’t confide or confess. 
Pisces says, “I will always love 

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): 
Promotion due. You get credit 
you've waited for a long time. 


Horoscope 

Sydney 0marr_ 

Focus on promotion, distribution, 
meditation. -Capricorn figures 
prominently. 

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): 
Completion of major project 
takes place. Wear colors that 
-indude red. Love relationship sit- 
- lies. Be sure you know where >-ou 
are going and -why. Libra 
involved. 


Jr. ..-- P*ay ngiuncant role. L 

CANCER (June 21-July 22): , ties; make use of them 


J^e your-own future. Take ini- 
tiative. Highlight original think- 
•• uig. Fresh start in new'direcUoh” 
would be positive. Leo, Aquarius 
persons play fantastic roles. 

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): 


Spotlight on partnership, coopera- 
tive efforts, marital status. Be pos- 
itive concerning direction, moti- 
vation. Cancer native will play 
unusual role. Number 2. 

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): 
Diversify. Insist on quality. Give 
full play to intellectual curiosity. 
Focus on humor, intelligence, 
accommodating yourself/to moods 
of others. 

• UBRA (SepL 230cL 22): M if 
a bolt out of the blue, additional ' 
funding is obtained, ^orpio will 
play significant role. Check priori- 


Don't get in vour 

_P_eople^e talking about you. You- ov.•nJt^•a>•..Cap^CQ^unvolvuL: 

co^d be pan of an internaoonaJ PISCES (Feb. 19-MBTCh 20): 
debate. Creative juices stir, read, What had been hidden wifi be out 
• wire, teach, Gemini. Virgo play in the open, to your advantage, 
dominant roles. Face music earlv, ■ ’ 


SAGITTARIUS (.Noy. 22-Dcc. 
21): Domestic adjus’tment i's 
imperative. Be .sure living quar- 
ters are comfortable, attractive. 
Music will sound. Find your 
rhythm. Dance to vour own tune. 

CAPRICOR.N (Dec. 2^Jan. 19): 
Be realistic. -^Discard previous 
notions aboufwhat is possible. 
Maintain aura of mystery. Don't 
4ell all; do not confide or confes-s 
Pisces represented. 

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fcb. 18); 
Judgment, intuition on target. 
You will be at right place at' cru- 
cial moment almost effortlessly. 
Ride with tide. Don't get in your 


Movie disclaimer might help separate fact, fiction 


DEAR ABBY: Everyone seems 
to complain about violence in 
movies and television. Perhaps 
fi^imaken would agree to put a 
dis^oimer in the credits (si^ar 
to “No animals were injured in 
the making of this film"). It could 
read: 

“In this film, the bullets were, 
blanks, the blood was fake, the 
wounds were makeup, the car 
crashes were, stunts, the explo- 
sions were special effects, the 
fights were rehearsed, and the 
sex was simulated. Do not try any 
of these things at home.” 

-EDDY HILL, SHERMAN 
OAKS.CAUF. 

DEAR EDDY: Your clever dis- 
claimer might serv e as a Jielpful 
reminder to audiences who forget 
that what they see on screen is 
entertainment and not reality. 
Some people, children in particu- 
lar, have ^ficulty differentiating 
between the two - and I can s)on- 
paihize with them. After silting 



De/\r 

Abbv 

Al)(^V^nBurai 


through some recent movies. I 
wish I had paid with play money. 

DEAR ABBY: Several years 
ago, you shared a recipe for a 
wonderful cheesecake. I made it 
several times, and i^was ,^ch a_ 
hit at our family get-togethers 
that they are asidng for it again. 
Pm ashamed to say, though, I mis- 
placed the recipe. 

Would you p'ease prim it again 
for me - and for everyone who 
may have missed it then? 

It was simple to make and deli- 
cious. - - ■ - . 

- A.B. IN HAMMOND, LA. 

DEAR A.B.: I'm pleased to 


help. It can be found in my cook- 
booklet set that includes other* 
favorite family recipes, such as 
my Coconut Cake With Custard 
Frosting. Chocolate Cake With 
Fluffy White Frosting, my “to ^e 
for" Heavenly Peanut Butter Pie. . 
and my Chocolate Mousse. Read 


■ Abby’s cheesecake 

CRUST: 

1 1/2 cups graham cracker 
crumbs ' 

1/2 cup butter; melted ( 1 stick) 
— l/3.0ip powdered sugar - 
CHEESECAKE: 

3 (8-ounce) packages cream- 
cheese, softened 

4 eggs- 

Itujj sugar 

1 teaspoon vanilla 

1 pint dairy sour cream. (at 
room temperature) 

I (21-ounce) can prepared cher- 
ry, blueberry or strawbern' pie 
filling 


1. Heat oven to 3S0 degrees. 

*2. Combine graham cracker 
crumbs, powdered sugar and 
melted buiutr. Press into bottom 
, of 8-inch.springfonn pan. 

'3. In a large bowl, beat creaiii " 
.cheese,. eggs, siigar and vanilla ■ 
until smooth. Pour mixture over 
prepared cru.st. ■ 

4. Bake at 350 degrees for 50 
minutes (until center is set), 

_S. Remove from oven and 
spread sour crearh on top of 
cheesecake. Return to, oven and. 
bake an additional 5 minutes, 

• • 6. Remove from nvon and allow " 
to cool. Spread desired topping 
on cheesecake. 

7. Chill overnight. Before ser\- 
-ingrcarefull\'TemovL--sldes'frbm“ 

pan. Seh'es 16. 

Tip; To minimize cracking, 
place shallow pan half full of hot 
water on lower rack of oven dur- 
ing baking, And be sure the wiur 
cream is at room temperature 
when you .spread it on.- 


Marketplace 


Thejimes-News Online htt p://www.magicvallev.coin • Twin Falls: 733-0931 • Burley: 677-4042 


101 Lnia Found 

102 CardolThonkt 

103 DltlaiyAk)} / 

104 Pofionali / 

108 HsppyAds 

106 Spo^ Noiicoi 

107 Abortion Altomsilvw 

108 Pfolouional Sorvicos 

110 HomsHoamiCoroUMf 

111 Entortalnmont Sotvlco 
113 Child Care Soivicos 

- 3000 Service Oiroctofy 


I 314 Employment Wonted 

I 216 BMumo Preparation 

• 216 EmptoymonlAgendc* 

J 217 ErnplojmontOwrturwiea 


-. {: 301 ButlMta Opporturuiiii 
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306 ^ Contreett 6 Mortgagoi 
306 Financial Serricoe 


401 SchooiWutructJon 

402 MuiieLastonj 

403 Tutoring 


ILmmJ Ren] Ritnlc 
Sales . 

601 OpenHomat 

602 Hoimn lor Saki 
510 Oul-OI-Area Homes 
611 Oul-OI-StalaHomai 
812 FormsTUnches'Dairios 
613 Acroagos and Lots 
814 tncoma Property 

816 Commerciol Property 

616 VocatlenPrcpervrmiShsrti 

617 Condomirtiums 
616 MobiteHomas 
610 ComeieryLoIs 
620 Real Etiile Wonted 
821 Monutodured bomes 


RcnlHsiuie 

Rental 

601 Furnished Houses 

_.60a Unfumishad Houses- 

'603 Furnished Apti4>uplaxM 
604 Unfurnished ApU7Difl)le*e8 
608 Rooms FofReot 
606- MobileHomes- 

607 Office A Rsuu Rentals 

608 CommofflalPfopotty. ... . 

6 09 ■ C ondemWummmo-Shaws 

810 StorogeWarohousa Rental 
611 FiimtForRont 


612 Pastures For Rent 
813 Posture Wonted 
614 WinledTofleni 
616 Mobile Home Space 
616 Roommates Wanted 


701 Uveslock 

702 FsrnvTUnch Supplies 
703. Custom Farm Sarvieos ' 
708 . Imgatlon 

708 FatmSeedAForUizor 
708 Hoy, Grain A Feed 


601 Antiques A Coneciibles 

602 Appiiinces 

803 Bouate A Crafts 

804 Building Metertoli 
606. Ctuneras A Eguipmenl . 
806 . Children's Items 

807 Clothing 

606 Communication Equipment 
609 Computers 

810 Firewood 

81 1 Fumflute'Carpel 

812 Heating A Air Conddtoama 

- 613 — AueWni * — 

814 JeweliyAFun 
'SIB LawnAGorden . 

818 Exerelso Equ^xnent 

'817 M'lseelaneous For Sole 
818 Musical Instruments 
816 - Office EquIpTSiipplies 

-6 3 0 — PettA-Si^piles 

821 SteretVRadkVCOs 
■22 Toots A Machinery 


823 Vsrteiy Food A Services 
624 Video Eeuipmeni 
628 Wonted To Buy 
628 Comprng Equiprnent 
627 Garage Sotos 

828 Mediul Supplies 

829 Ftoo MoiOets 

630 Wonted CoOeciibies 


001 ATVf A MoMreydos 

902 6«yctos 

903 Boats A Accessonos 
004 Compere A Sheile 
903 OuneARiftos 

906 HotTubeAPoolf 

907 Motor Homes A RVs 
906 Snow Vehictos A Eqwp 
000 Sporting 6 Hunting Equip 

910 Tcevel fraHeri 

911 UUityTioitore 


1001 , Aviation 

1002' Auto Parte A Acceesorws 
1004 Autes.Wanlad 
1006 Anl^s A CoOeclOXes 


. 1007 Trucki 
1006 Truck Parts A Accoesortos 

1009 4x4s 

1010 Vena ABussoi 
1020 AutosforStto 

- 1053-fmports A Sports-Care 

1064-SscJr 


132 3rd Street West | 32.S V 2 East .3th Ndrlli 

Twin Ealls, Idaho 83301 'I Burley, Idaho 8,3318 
Oi--|.ii:t:lloi ns; Mon.-h'ri. 8.-00 to 5:30 


^ In 

c-muil: lwinud@niiLTon.net 

- Happy Ads - 

Ceicbnio special ewni m tlu* iivi-s of friends .imi 
lowdono wilha T«tm>-NVws H.ippv Ad. Uispt.ty ,h 1 s 
of .tnv sl/e .irv .tvaihble at sfxvi.il r.rli-t. 

* -Pre-Payment- 

Dw nm«.-Nevv> .teevpb. p.ntnvnt tur d.tssifiixl ,-ids in' 
c.ish. perMvrtal cheek. Vi>,V, M,i8lerC.ird, AnuTie.tn 
.Exptcvs nr Discowr. 

- Responsibilities - 

Check vtnir -id hw entm. the fiiM dnv. Hie 1 ime>-News 
will be tv^prmsihle for the first inamcl iixx-rtitm .ind to 
no gtuUer extent tlvin the ct«st of sp.vx- ix.x-upiwl bv the 
CTor. The publisher -wumes no fin.tnci.il n-spotv-ibilih- 
fcr enors or omissitm of copv. 


-Deadlines- 

l*or Private Part) I.inc .-Yds; 


SL'NDAY 

Monday 

Tlesdat 

WCDSFiOA^ 
THLRSnA^ 
Fridai 
' Saturday 
Ac. Wehkuv 


‘•JTk'f FkTuAY 
' - 5 1’.M Friday 

1 1 I'M Mosda3 

•DA> 1 I'M TulSDAI 

1 I’M WlOSLSlUY 

1 I'M Thurm)a\ 

A' 12 I'M Fridat 

KUV 3 I'M TmURSDAI 

For I)ispla\ .\ds 

.lays |)iinr m fiiililK-jii.m I .ill .t | n 


/-Diiv (Ttin nmtec Ad ...rct-nljr 7-djy n 

S3 end if (he item doe^ not ^1 . i-jI) iisum 

Jllh ilic.ud I'uf an jddiii.i nji.7 iLt 


74r /'(»«r>..\j-i-. On/w. le.lMircs iu-I'-Ium-.I il.lssil’ie, 
.uK. \m d.isMl'u-d .III pi, lied in tin- |itmi vorMnri i, 
jWh TAr /'rrnr.j-.Vrvi i.m lie pl.iied unliiii- l.n Mk per d.n 
per jil. In jiMiiinn i<> Vhr Sn. ’ <h,lmr. ,uh .n, 

mdmicil in oiii ii.itinn.il iiciiw.rk ot vljssitied ,ids 
tlimiicli .1 i>.iriiiciNliip mmIi \ilOnc Cl.issilici 

Not w.itk , 111 . 1 - 1111 . fc-i!ian-ntHh-nctrrp- 4 pcn-;ieni\N-thi 

tutiiiii. e-nmil: twiniiJijTinieniii.riet 

. CallOur-Customcr-Service-^ 
Representatives for Information i.n 
Glassified-Specials! 


irciliat.l.*;. )r/i m.n A- <VHfrl/ri/rilil\Ji>r,Tiflomrr,vfftv>'lrmr hui 
sell, call . vUI no! iT'ivini or \ul<ililulfil. 

the ad f<K an additiunal 7 itivs. . h'or prk'tttr [unyy onlx. Esdude!. prts and /hrsfoct.. 






Idaho Frklav. Docomber 1, 2000 


50 

-teOAf — 


_ -50 

Ceqal 


NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE 

^*** February 20, 2001, in (he 
, Ofllce ol Ffrat American Title Company, 260 3rd Av»> 
• rv^ftinu^' Amofican Tillo 

, Company. M Tmsioe. will self at public auction, to the 
hiBhost Wddor. lor cash. In lawful money of the Uniled 
J ®"f"> of iole. the foUowIng 

dOBcrlbod fOQl property, situated in Twin Falls Counhr 

Idaho, and described as follows, to-wit ’ 

Lot 14 In Block 1 of Hanson Estales. Twin Falls County 
Idt^ acrording to the plat ihorool. rdcordod In Book 10 
of Plats, Pago 23. records of sold County. 

Inlonnnllon concerning the foreclosure action may be ob- 
mnm tolopliono number la 

(208) 785-5511. According to the Truitee'e recorde 
^e itreet addreae of 60B Wlaemen Street, Heneen - 
Idaho, la ■omeilmet associated with eald propel. 
Said sale will bo made without covenant or warranty 


Ohs. 


f 


101 

LOST a FOUND 


I Please chock your ad for 
correctness on the lirst' 
day that it nrns, as The 
Timos'Nows Is not re* 
sponsible for errors af- 
ter that time. ' 


E-MAIL your classified 

regarding title, possession, or oncumbrancos^o s^ — twlnadOml cron.net 

the obligations secured by ar>d pursuant to the power o1 FOUND Small young, 
I Oood of Trust executed by sherry • * f®'' fomolo dog. 

L eWRK, a tingle woman, as Grantor. First American of Gooding. Friendly. 

Tioo Insurance Company, as Trusloo, for the benefit and ' 93<-56«3 

oecurlty ^ United States of America, acting through the tound nt x I — 

• f aimors Homo Administration. United Slates Oeparbrient 
ol Agrlcultufo. dated March 4. 1988. recorded March 4 c? “ 

1988. as Insuumont No. 935914. ail records of Twin Falls 


, Sky - Misc. glovea, hats 
and socks. Pieesa claim 
at Klmberty Nursery. 


County. Idaho. — .... 

„ Gfomor(s) are named to comply with Section — 

ih . ^® fopfOBontalion Is made FOUND- Golden Rotrlovor. 

inot Ihoy are. or ore not, prosonlly responsible for this Call to idantify. Call 

obligation. 

The dolauli for which this sale Is to bo mode 1s the 
failure to: 


736-7109. 
YouS fine I 


failure to; louenna a vtn< ., onmereti. 

I, iTMko in, monw, 5cMm.d InsMI m. nl ft,, oo rh. .ih ^ 'T' 


FOUND, Roan Appy gald- 
Ing, found In Wandell. 
. Contact Kelly Goodman 
934-4725 or Goorgo 
Sponcor at 886-2019. 
(State Brand Inipector) 


LOST (Pack Idaho) 
Day-pock lost betwoon 
11/16-11/22. Somowhero 

betwoon Oakley & Joromo 
Reward oflorod, 
324-7115of 734-1706 


i^ST black Shih-Tzu 
collar/namo Cuddles & 
Poky dog tag. 677-3059 


LOST CHAINSAW. Sllhl 
farmhand modal. .Lost In 
Xmas tree unit 1 . call 
678-6631 


black, lomala, under- 
grocmad, Scottla, 11 yrs 
old. Call 862-9244.B 


S2.448.00 

The principal balance Is S21.542.04, togolhor with 
POf annum In the amount of 
oraniod Is Si, 895.51. all as of Octo- 
Dor b 2000. and accruing inlorojf. All dolinquortcios are 
now duo logoihof with any lata charges, advances to pro- 
tect the socuriiy, and loos ond.costs assodaiod with this 
lorodosuro, The Bonofidory olocls to sell or cause said 
’ property to bo sold to saiisfy sold obligation 
DATED mis 18lh day of Oclobor. 2000. 

First Amorican Tiilo insurance Company 
/s'Darlono plohl-Nilsson. Trust Ollicor 

PUBLISH: November t7, 24, Doco mbor 1 and 8, 2000 
NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE 
On Wednesday, the 31sl day ol January. 2001. at the 
hour ol 10.00 o'clock a m. ol said day. at Alliance Titlo & 

Escrow Corp„ 31 1 2nd Sirool North, in the City ol Twin 
Fans. County ot Twin Falls, State of Idaho, Alliance Titlo 
& Escrow, a Dolawara corporation, as Successor 

rrusioo, Will soli ol public auction, to the highest bidder for ' 

f«pf'oy.of,tho.Unllod States, all payable a\ 5 — :: — 

mo time of sale, the following dpsenbod real prelporty 
silualod wiihin the County of Twin Falls, ‘Slolo ol Idaho 
nnd described as follows: 

Lot 7 in Block 2 of Suburban Park Addition, according to 
mo otlicial plat Ihorool, Mod in Book 2 of Plots at Paoo 12 
Olhcial Records olTwin Falls-County. Idaho (togolhor 
With real property imp-nvomonf in me ‘orm of a t996 
Wb ne manufactured homo, Serial 

•No 16-96-106-3953). EXCEPT the North 100 loot ol said 

The property horoin dosenbod Is located at 349 Van 
Huron Street. Twin Falls, Idaho, to the best ol Iho 
is Sivon to comply 

wtmidahoCodo§60-ii3, I ' 

The sale will bo made wiihoui covenant or warranty 
mgardmg title, possession or encumbrances to satisfy the 

®°®^'°5-^y.''il«<.P'jrsuanl.to.lhQ powar.of sale - 

coiitarred m ifio Deed of-Trust (securing Real Estate 
Noto).oxoculod by Jeff Koepnick. Grantor to Scot M. 

Ludwig, trusloo (Alliance Title & Escrow Corp,, successor 
trusloo), lor the bonofil and security ol Groon Troo 
Financial Servicing Corporation (now known as Conseco 
Financo Servicing Corp,). as bonoticiary, dalod 
November 21, 1995. rctorded Novombor 22. 1995 os 
• Instiumont No. 1995018233. records of Twin Fills 
cS'v w;tL GRANTOR IS NAMED TO 

®S'''S06(41{a). IDAHO CODE, 
ic^Srt? iS made THAT HE IS| OR 

OB™Jtio5 ® "ESI-ONSISLE FOR THIS 

• Tho cfofauii for which this sale is to bo made is mo ' I 
lailufo of Iho grantor to pay the monthly paymonis * 

.mquirod by said Deed ol Trust and roioiod Real Esiaio 

- of 2000 through September 
2000, inclusive in mo amount ol S385.68 par month and 
continuing each and qvory month Ihoroaiior until the dato 

M, Iwrmor, that Iho sum owing on 

the obligation secured by said Oood of trust is $46,077,46 
piincipal. iogoihor with applicable and nccruihg Iniorosi ot 
mo por diorn rale of Sn.SO, tax doiinquoncy payments 

“"I «"!«' 

Tho sum pwing as.Of Soplombor 25. 2000 on tho obli- 
gallons secured by said Oood of Trust is SS2 662,04 
including principal and iniorosi. but excluding accruinij 
iniorosi after Sopiombor 2S, 2000, and costs and 

— ®*P®f>so5-«lually-.ncurrod in-onforeing Iho obligations ' 

ho nbovo-moniionod Doad of Trust or in wnnoc- 
lion with this saio. as Trustee's (00s anaior roasonablo 
niiornoy loos, as autnorisod m tho Promissory Nolo 
securod by Iho ofo.iomonuonod Dood ol Trust, 

DATED mis 27ili day ol Soplombor 2000 

ALLIANCETLTLE 4 E^HOW COf?P ' 

By: Brad Hartman. Vico-Prosidoni 

PUBLISH. Novombor 24, Docombor 1, 6 and IS, 2000 

IN THEO'lSTRlCT COURT 2000 with Iho gonoral 
mombofship mooting to bo 
° ^nc docombor 14lh from 

POP Imp r°r^ ^ 00 PM and tho 

®03rd ol Diroclors mooting 
MArilrDA-TP minciii.i Oo'hg hold on Docombor 

c“, N?s™ 

NOTICE OF TIME AND /s/GionorvH Lowrv 

f I'oS tS D^TEHMWE 


LOST femaSa, 18 mo. oW 
Lab. 1 1/26, betwoon 
. FarmhouM RMtaurani 
' and F 8L In Wendalt. An- 
swore to Annla, rto kL 
mod. problems that needs 
dally medicine. 543-6990 
— orcaH tocaf pound.M 


104 

PERSONALS 


108 

PROFESSIONAL 
SERVICES 


LADIESI LADIE8I LA* 
DIESI Thankagivlrtg haa 
pasaod, whynotdo 
Christmas. If you are 60 
lo6SORand want lo 
share lima. lamOSWM. 
non-smokor/drinkor. hon- 
est coring Chrlsllan. A 
frlond Is hard lo find. 
PleasocallA leave name 
& number O 324-8748 


106 

' SPECIAL NOTICES 


ALCOHOLICS 
ANONYMOUS 
208-733«00 ft 72646S0M 


FAX 

YOUR 


. BANKRUPTCY 
' Compotittve rates on Chap- 
- ter 7 banknrpIciOB. Call 
Jeff Sto ker at 734-8452, 
BTOKEEPtNO 30yrs. 
exper. Full charge rapablli 
ties. Elfldont a accurate. 
Hour^ or month rates. 
Call 9-6pm. 733-3003 


Handy Man Ramodet. 

Fromlrtg, pluTd)ing, 
drywaO. an^lno. Reason 
able rates. 326-6S28M 
~ HOUSE CLEANING 
Lot mo eoaa your busy fife. 
Joann. 735-0677. 


MAOIC VALLEY 
COUNTERTOPS 
Have old kiicnon c<ajnisr 
lops replaced or 
prafabdeotod cablnols 
Installed. 208-678-8377 
for trao oatimatos. 


PROFESSIONAL HOME 
CLEANINO avaltoblo In 
tho MV area. Exper.. exc 
retofoncea. 536-2053 


AD 

TIMES CLASSIFIED 
DEPARTMENT 
208 - 734-5538 

on 

206 - 677-4543 

(BURLEY) 


REMEMBER - 

That binhday ad you placed 
some lime agoin Tho 
Trmes-A/flws? Now is the 
timo to come pick up your 
picturos. Stop by The 
Customor Service Oopi 
lodayl 


THE HANDYMAN CAN 
Repair, Rotxjiid. Replace 
OfflemoTO. Jim 326-4150 


.111 

ENTERTAINMENT 

SERVICES 


'^ANTAFOR HIHE*i< 
Avallafilo Days. Evertings. 
Parties. Hootoe, Dayceroi 
*328-S256-Leave Mag» 


107 

ABORTION 
ALTERNATIVES 

PRECNAHCr Cflt^CE^R 
FPEETESTING 
734-7472 - 800-371-7472 


SANTA FOR HIRE 
Call 734-6507. ■ 


Child Care Jn my home, 
Men.-Fri. 7am-5/eprrL 
CPR. ICCP accepted. 

fenced back yard, 
iunches/snecks provldod. 
Cod 736-01 17JI 


I Kallysea Bandalda ft Bear 
Huge has oponings 
Fit.. 24 hr. service. CPR- 
ICCP approved. 736JK09. 


KIDS CLUB now has avall- 
ablo opontngs lor 16 mos 
to5yrs.Can734-814a 
LicenJod. CPR. ICCP 
for19yri “ 


KIDZKORNERhaa 
-openir*gs.-Houfar7 am 
6 pm. Jodie 734-6406 • 


STEP AHEAD 
LEARNING CENTER 
736-2000 


PUBUC SERVICE 
MESSAGE 

Don’t pay to find work be- 
fore you got mo job. For 
free information about 
avoiding employment ser- 
vice seems, wrtle to the 
Federal Trade Commis- 
sion. Wnshlngfen. D.C., 
'20580, or call me NaOon- 
al Fraud Infomution Cen 
lor, 1-800-876-7060. 


ACCOUNTING 

ASSISTANT . 

Position In a large 
Insurance agency. This 
person will bo responsible 
fev Insurartco company 
-accouruapayabie 


customer focused quality. 
Company has a groat 
working environment and 
excellent bonofits. Send 
resume to: Comroller, 
P.O. Box 8. Twin Falls, 
ID 83303 


«*****«*«***4>««* 

ADMINISTRATOR/ 
SUPERINTENDENT 
Now accepting applications 
for Camas County Wood 
Confrol Superintendent/ 
Administrator ol fho Ca- 
mas Creak Cooparativo 
Weed mgmi Area at Fair- 
field. Idaho for employ- 
mom beginning Fob. 28, 
2001. TMe Is 0 FT penna- 
nem position el S26-32K 
por year w/ beiiolits. For 
doiaiiod doscnpiion send 
a SASE to: Cm« Sfeor-' 
Ing Commlnoc. P.O. Box 
130. FairtieM, Id. 63327. 


- ASKING QUESTIONS 
Conduct public opinion 
poUs over the telephone. 
ABSOLUTELYNO 
SALESI Strtety resetr^. 
$7.00 to $94)0 per hour. 
_Casuat work envlrtjnment. 
Flexible eves, days, ft 
wknd. hours. 15-Whra. 
per week. Groat Part-time 
lob or second job. Close 
to CSI compus.'For more 
Info, call 738-28531111111111 


AUTOMOTIVE 

AUTO GLASS ~ 
INSTALLERS 
Growing multl-etate corp. 
Banellts up to $1000 per 
week, experience 
od. Can 1 


BARTENDER 
Trout Selobn, 643-4400 
teeve msg. 


CARWASH 
PfT washing trucks, eves. 
Must have drtvera Ucenae 
& be 18 plus. 738-i 
call evenings. 


CLERICAL 
•Customer Service 
•Clerical positions 
733-7300 or 678-4040 •• 
PERSONNEL PLUS 


Instruction 

Ashley's Orywall, experl- 
onced tapers needed. 
Contract or hooity In Sun 
.ValIoy-Araa.-a24-939l/ 

530-6432 


CUSTODIAN 

Filer School District is tak- 
ing applicaUona for a fun- 
time Cuviodlan. Expert- 
' CO desired. There Is a 
working day probatoln 
period, upon completion 
you are entitled lo the fol- 
lowing benefits: health In- 
surance. vacation (10 
days per year), and sick 
days (ons per month). 
Starting pay Is S7.99/hr. 
DOE. Closing dato for this 
position will bo December 
18. 2000 with a start date 
Of January 3, 2001. To 
apply contact Sandra 
Robert, Filer School Db- 
tna S413. 700 B Stevens 
Avo.. Flier. ID 83328 or 
• (208)32^6981, 

your east) flow pfoUemt 
by seong me n»mt you no 
longer rwed with a ful-ect- 
Ing caMWed «d. 


CONSTRUCTION ■ 
Local Instillation of dairy 
ventilation systems. No 
expererience necessary. 
$7 ftup/hr.DOE. 324-4448 
CONSTRUCTION ' 

Busy painting business, 
looking for Individual to 
work FT ft PT. Must hivs 
own car. CaD 733-5837. ■ 


COOK 

Expsrienosd breakfast 
cook. Apply Idaho Joe’s 
Restaurant, 596 Blue 
Lakes Bfvd. N. TF 


**********W**W« 

DAIRY 

Horizon Organic Otlry Is 
now hiring night mllkete 
starting pay i6.97/hr.. 

night cow pushers 
$887/hr., night maternity 
S7.69/hr., equip, operator 
$6.83/hr. Positions Include 

vacation pay + go^ 

bensfits. Pwase ooniacf 

Yoeal 433-0450 axt. 109. 


DAIRY 

I Looking lor a hard woiklna 
-individual with ma ti ng a nd 
' outsida work experience. 
Apply In person between 
11arn-3pm only Monday- 
Friday. Wlorsme Dairy, 
19882 Hwy 30. Buhl. 


DAIRY 
Ullk tester position avail- 
able. Must have reliable 
vehicle. Call 324-7799 
leave messago. 


NOW HIRING 


, AOShiftiAvallabte - 
M.00-S1(U)0 per hour 

PranerndToperay 

Aeeipangifipiadotslot 

Constnictlon 

Clerictl 

Foium Certified ' 
Production 
Machine Operetors 


General Uhor 
Asaembly 

Appl)i in person at 



Needed: outelde dairy 
worker, $1 600/mo. CaH 
736-7830 or 420-3128 be- 
tween 10am ft 2pm. ■ c - 


DANCERS- 
Looking for lodopendertt:^ 
male ft fsmile dancers.-* 
Weeupply thsspacs- 
- ibrt^ the talent For 




> can 73&-9685JI 


, -A Great 

BankHn Career Move. 

Vim SlOtNQ SALES ft WSTALLATK^ 

be reaponeUe lor prcA arvj owal Hies cf stckx) M Ml I 
I as managing t« joba and Inaialalanoowa. 26 years cf Mad I 
' and kwilaicn aiperionoe needed. As 1 mentw cf ojr ^ I 
^wl rooetw ccnp0t«« aslaryi telto hours «id n«»v 
qse dacom Fnrtdh gjdHo SuxAr emptoyMa ^ 

PM h prdi sharing, 401K. andmnfcNsnd <MN prawie. 

Wal«vokTfi»da»camorcpponun«o6lorenem8dcMi*Ju- 
ab Mho are K> work hard and er(oy goN benete. 


Ask AdHound 
to search our 
classifieds 

for you. 


30 end Docombor 1 , 2000 


HUNKE, NOTICE OFMEETINO — 

Docoasod, CHANGE 

THEBOAROOF 

GIVEN trial Dons Roinko TRUSTEES KIMBERLY ‘ 
rins Iilod a Polillon lor n SCHOOL DISTRICT 1414 
docfoo dolormining ttioi TWIN FALLS COUNTY ID 
stio was mo solo bonoli- OpenMoailng$ ■ 

cinry ol the clocodonl. . 

Hearing rias boon sot 

upon mo Poliiion on the HEREBY 

I8lh day of January. 2001 * to the patrons of 

at 9:00 o’clock AM-at the No. 414 

courtroom ol Iho above- of Tnjsfsos 

omiKod court in Twin Falls. Kimborly School District 
County ol Twin FoiK Rmto changed Iho Oocom- 

"ToMaolioT -bor'Bonrd'mootlng'dalo's'” 

DATED this I3lh day ol Docombor Board 
Novornbo^OOO, mooting will bo hold on 


PUBLISH: Novombor 24, 
Doc ombof 1 e nds. 2QQD 


LEGAL NOTICE 
Tho Docombor 200u 
iriooling ot tho Bonrd ol 
Directors oiid tho annual 
gonoral momborship of iho 
Idaho Crop Improvomoni 
Association. Inc. will bo 
hold fit Iho'Owyhoo Plaza 
In Bolso, Idaho Tho moot- 
ing will bo hold over tho 
throo day poriod. Docom- 
bor I3lh. I4ih and.lSih. , 


Thursday, Dceember 14, 
2000 ot 7:00 p.m. In Tho 
Kimberly High School 
• Library.- Tms'maoling will 
roptaco Iho rogu[ariy schod- 
ulod mootings that would 
have boon on Thursday. 

. Docombor 7lh ond Thurs- 
day, Docombor 21sl, 2000. 

Onlod this 28ih day of 
Novombor. 2000. 
/s/Mnreono Blunck 
Board, Secretory 
School District No. 414 
Tyvin Foils County, Idaho 


.Tel l AdHound what you’re looking for and hp’II -;parch to find a 
match. Then he emails the ad to you. 

He can roam right here at home, or through the pages of more 
than 500 newspapers nationally. 

- For more information, call 733-0931. 


SELtriT! BOYn 

A Tlmes- Newa C laaslflftri 
Will Fill Every Need 

-^^33^0931 


http;//www.magicvalley.com 


DELIVERY PERSON } DWVER9 I M-c»UMir 


Friday, EWcembqr 172)06. tlm#»-Now8, Twin Falla, Idalw E5 


flood bonus- nSs ,^d TSnTnVn^ rwwoo to apply. shape? Want to laarn or akills holpful! sTz 

ss a bwX . 734-0062. MEOTCAL ^ 'hour plus benefits. I 

■bla. "W# olfa^ E-WAiL your dassiflod ua ' Harbaugh i^rs. .4 for collena?*??wou'??^ icT*T?ifclIk?-ir 


drlvlnoraoordSbs -rrrrj! ^ 

dapsndibfa. TVa oiler E-tUU. your dassiflod ad 

good pay, paid vactlon, ,5 “■ *• 

madical Jnauranea & tartnadOnucroonet 
many ottioffsason to Join EDUCATION 
o^arn. II Inlerasiad CSI-South Contral Hoad 


.WIWU. MISCELLANEOUS PROtMJCTTOH 

DICAL • 5 * l®clmlcal hour plus benefits. Send 

ale Vslf*y Bumhg'i •‘“•'"••d money to psy rasuma to; Mor.-po Box 
^dle&l Supply, Inc la fo*’ ^Ispa? II you an- 1 S3. Twin Foils. iP 63303, 


plaaaocal1.aOD«»3a4Q| Start la accsptlng am 


Auto Cadd 2000 LT. Full ^‘,?T^our. >. 

pr part lima 736-O0M 35 hoursAwaak, full-yair. ■ 

Bsnelita ara Included. Twin Falls < 
Pick up application and Has In 

Twin Fana Consulting £n- Job dasolplton at 324 2nd Opening 

filnaerlng Firm. Expert- Street East. Twin Falls Following 
aoca wWi ^oC^. and Review ol applications will •_„ 

MIcrq station CAD pro- begin Immsdlaiely upon ® 

pramt pfafarred. Must ba recaid and conilnuo until »1600 sig 

. abla to communicate and pMltion is filled. EOE . , on «' . 

woA In a team environ- ^ ® 

JnanL Can 20S-734^I5 OENEHAL *500slgn 

or mall resume to: Bean/ Paa Seed Min ^ 

McClufo ^ineortng. Inc. Peieon-Mln.Zyta.expefl- Weoffer: 


:du- TWIN^FALLS 

our. C«r£_CMrir^ 


OMnlr^ for tbo 
Following Positions: 


• LPM-S & 12 hr shirts 
$500 sign on bonus! I 


I currently accepting appn- »wef«J y*« lo any of the 5., 7- 
clion.l^.lITor "'•WtlioAmy “Jg 

C.NA’s to work 24 hour Nniional Guard may bo 
ehms. Magic Valley Staff. «blo to help Call SFC 
Ing & Medical Supdy, Inc 734-0171 or 

laalamllvo^ted 1*«0(KKW3UAno. , Statioo 
contoany. Flexible ached- OFFICE Pacai 

ules are available, Inter- Office hoto needed srrss- 
esied applicants should Monday- Friday 2-6pm & 
apply In person at 200 SoLmomhos We war 

2ndAve.North,TwlnFall8 P«opie 

10 63301 EOE OPERATOR hard li 


1 217 

employment 

^PPORTTJNTTES 

PUBUC SERVICE - 
MESSAGE 

Federal en^loymont Intor- 


FAX 

YOUR 


NEEDED Local Sales 
Manager to manage aaJes 
at Twin Falls Tolrvialon 
Station. Send resumes to; 
P.O. Box 667. 
Pocalollo. 10.83201. 


malion Is freo. Remom-- tiup <5 ri accicicm 
ber. no one can promise CLASSIFIED 

you a federal job. Foriroo DEPARTMENT 

208 - 734-5538 


Inlormation about loderal 
Jobs, call Career America 
Connoction. 912.757-3000 


OPERATOR ' uiiui 

The City of Twin Fslla is onvlronmonl. No 

ocnptino applications lor once necessary. We will BUHL (6) 

M Operator in the Water train the right aoollcanu • . . . . 

Department. Beginning •. to soli advertising for our ■ w A X 
rtionthly salary is $1761 market loading stations ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ 
p^us fuU benefit package, Apply al: KeIi. KOOL «, 

Under supervision, per- OLDIES, KUX, 415 Park THE HMES-NEWS i 
terms heavy physical la- Avo„ Twin Falls. 10. or CURRENTLY HAS I 


P.O. Box 1 404. Twto Fans 


DRIVER 

rjtocal driver needed. 

. 1-r Home eveiy night 
:V Year round work. 

Straight troc«r*omL . J^f^lJOlArE OPENINGS 

Cortiparty paid bertefils. * ifiriusblaHJght & Heavy 

Moslbeover25yri.old. * Factory;All Shifts 

Must have Oasa A COL * Construction 


ence.H.S70E0. 

pay.'benefits, WI50-100#. ♦ P®*'* Time Off 

Send resume: ASI, P.O. ♦ Neafth/VlsiofVDentol & 
Box 1231. Twin Fells, Insurance 

I063303-1231JI *401K 


accepting applicotlons lor 
Neoded coftlfied OMRP an O^rttor in the Water 
person for part lime work Oopartmont. Beginning 
starling knmedlaloly. Can monthly salary Is $1761 

Rome Care plus fuU benefit package. 

7334J849. Under supervision, per- 

HEdCAL ^ hOBvy physical la- 

Roooptoi^ranscrtotionist ®'*^- ®® ''ooF«l. opor- 
for MinCassla ohtaidans -®’*® vohldos and 

«• . 1? . enulnmAnl IrrunKMH ^ *Ka 


We want carosr minded 
people who want lo work 
hard In a proteaalonal 
onvlronmonl. No expert- 


216 

Times News 
Carriers 


OR 

208 - 677-4543 

(BURLEY) 


market loading stations r\ ^ 

Apply al: KEIi. KOOL _ 

OLDIES, KUX, 415 Park THE TIMES-NEWS 


wNi N and T endoraemena. 
TF area. Rendering Co. 

• 140D-322-3289.a 


I * Forklift 
! * COL Drivers 

* Mechanic 

* W8ld0fa_ _ 
TOP PAY -NO FEE 


j %Tlmee-News, 

(Ptooso apply In ponon at; 'if 

' MS. Twin Fells, ID 63303 

TwliV Fills Cere Center MEDICAL ' 

Twin F^:W tSbl Ma5k’vS??oXal 


assess 

548, Twin Fete 63303 fBQUihW to do Invented 

ry control and compulor customer 

MEDICAL entry. For omploymont tolallon skills. Starting 

u "«®»^STALKII appllcallona. including 

Magic Valley Regional complete Job doscripiion Call BHI O 733-775S or 

Medical Center la looking and Qualificatioos contact ®F^ 5 person, 

lor exportoncod: RN’e for the Personnel Office lo- t®™*’ 


full/part-Ume & PRN pool- colodlnCttyHaII,321 2nd 
evening & night Avenue Eost or phono 


Oekwood Homes, 
21396 Hwy 30. Twin Foils. 
2U mi ot hospital ■ 


or CURRENTLY HAS 
_ THE FOLLOWING 

INDEPENDENT 
»' NEWSPAPER 
”i ROUTES IN BUHL 

an 

lor ROUTE 546 
ng 200 BIk. 3rd Avo. N. 
)E too BIk. Brook Dr. 
or 2d0-a00 BIk. Main St. 
100 BIk Rainbow Cirdo 


PROFESSIONAL TRUCK 1 1 1 Fitof Aw ras^rlond ACTlVmES ASSISTANT sf’lfte. Openings on van- 735-7251. Closing date Is .WAREHOUSE 
DWVWOSCH^L ^^£ 5 ^ Part-tl^.20hr/wk.forT.F. Ooc. 0. 2000, ThS City ol ' SUPERV 

' CLASS A COL Care Cerrter. Some exper. Bxporlencod OR Nurse & Twin Falls is an Equal Op- Forlocalagi 

• State Cerllfled. possible PcRSONNEL roquirrto. Apply in person h VV ®!|JJ®*®®' Porlunity Employer. A businoss.Gt 


financing available, 
hydrogen oaslsted truck. 
Cair734-0586a 


0Piy£j» “ GENERAL OFFICE 

efwwintnn..B^t.».^ p l- E*P<*rienced offlce porson, 

4.'.llorl.n..d, 1 

;pay, health kmironco & 2bte 

New^Sfaftm^A^w po»'"on with bonelils. "G 

- ^we8 &60667B5M _Sond resume to Help 
DRIVERS Wanted P.O. Box 366, ““ 

Flatbed regional. $500 sign > Twin f^a, ID 83303 

«'.TCTa«Ha5.5233. jai RBTTlJBT 

drivers Loose station avail, lor < 

•-FT/PT needed OTR. ' Stylist in won establisi 
Refers. Western Stales. salon. 733-6334, Cara 

Canada. $500 sign on HAtBCTviKw 

..bonus. Fuel 4 safety 
'horiw poesibla. Homo NAIL TECH 
frequently. 886.6^7600. 


Patl-Umo, 20hr/wk. for T.F. 
Care Center. Some oxper. 
required. Apply in person 
at 674 Eastland Ave. 
MEDICAL 

CNA nooded lor 
one on one care. 
Full-tlmo. ovonlng shift. 

Apply In person at 
Twin Falls Care Center 
574 Eastland Drive 
EOE 


ous units available. ALSO Ooc. 0. 2000, The City ol ' SUPERVISOR 
9^ * Twin Falls is an Equal op- For local agricultural 

Cor t If led Surgical porlunity Employer. A businoss. Good pay & 

Technician. Wo ollor Drug Free Workplace, bonolits. Must have 

P''«2‘'’fl''’‘flht 4 PAPA UURPHV~B mechanical skills, COL, 4 

“Tz'SSiiiffis' 

Our compollll,, salary » Wpla 10 »o,k - 

OOP oxcolloal FloxIPIo "vonmos. Alsol ^ p J 

Por»ropockapo«auPos; i“p Jl™.; Twin Fain. ID 63303. 

*.PRN up 10 20% above PLUMBERS . ^ 

-w. Journeyman 4 Approni«os e® 

♦ Paid Time Off Call 208-76^9420 ^® ® * looking lor corro- 

• Hoolth/OontaWtsien bp<rr«imAiJ ? ^ — spondents to koop our 

•Ufo/AD4D/L'n) ■ MeAiAUKAffT-.-- — readors tnlormo'* aSoui 


II you lln In Buhl 4 ere 
Intormaiod In being e 

Indcpondenl newspaper 
carrier... 

P/eese confeel Diatrlct 
Uanegcr 
735-0931, wxt.347 

'A A A A A A A 

H you live In Buhl S era 
Intereated In being e 

IrKtependeni newspaper 
cerrfer... 

Pheae confect Diatrlei 
Ueneger 
733-0931, ext. 347 


I HAIRSTYLIST 
I Loose station avail, lor exp. 

• etvHUa:.. .-w. _JT. 


HAIR STYUST 
Robyn Todd 
in the Magic Valley Mail to 
hiring a STYUST. 
Apply in person 


Fate to looking lor corro- 733-093t,^t. 347 
spondents to koop our 

readors'tnlormo'* about 

what's ooino on in the out- A' ^ ^ ^ « 


TWIN FALLS (7) 

A- AAA AAA 

THE TIMES-NEWS 
CURRENTLY HAS 
THE FOLLOWING 
INDEPENDENT 
, NEWSPAPER 
ROUTES ON THE 
EAST SIDE OF 
TWIN FALLS 

ROUTE 716 
500-600 Bullo Dnvo 
700 Bik. Eastland 
■ 2200-2300 Filer! 
500-700 Rimview 
2200 Bik Siadium 

ROUTE 722 ' 
2600-2900 9lh Avc. E 
2800 ETnabefh Ave 
,900 Gallup Drive 
700-900 Hahkins 
flOO-ffOO rrofferDrive 

ROUTE 729 
1 100 Bik 4th Ave E 
1100-1400 Bik 5th Avc. 
East 

n00:r400m6thAvc.' 

East 

fOO-SOOS/ko/Ash I 


A — 

GUARANTEED 

AD 

Buy the Guaranteed' 
Package and 
The Tfmes-News 
guarantees to sell 
merchandise or 
, automotive items in 
7 days arid real 
estate in 15 days or 
vie v/ill rerun the ad 
an additional / days. 
There is a S3 extra 
charge for the 
guaranteed package. 
Ads may be 
cancelled early 
for customer 
convenience but 
the charge v/ill 
remain the same, 

REMEMBER 

.Thai biithdoy od you pkicod 
50FTH} tune ego in The Tmei- 
NowrT> Noe to the tmo lo 
come fxk up your 
Sioo by Iho Cusiomor 
SofVTCo Dept loOay* 


•Rotifomeni La Caste Moxlcan Roslau- what's going on in the out- ^ A' ^ ^ ^ ^ W . p 

•Tuition Rolmbursamont ''^''’0 communllios wo 5 „picv 100-600 fl;k o/A<„ 

• Infant Caro Conlor and c Womood wniors to HURLEY m ol Ash 

muchmoro Evening Wailporsop - 4 koop us up on the nows in A.A. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ‘*00-700 Bik ot Blue 

shifts per week, must bo Glenns Ferry. Bliss, ♦* Lakes ' 
“Apply at: — lOyoars ol ogo_ Gooding. Shoshono. Oil 


_The_Times-Nows is 

■■ cJrreriiiy looking lor 

Independent Walking 
Route Carriers In the 
BURLEY area. 


“ Apply at:— - 
650 Addison Avo W. 
Human Resources 


• Cook for evening shift. 3 otrlch. RWifiokJ. Fairfiold' 
OT4 shills per wook, Fcabo, Buhl. Casllolord! 


• ROUTE 7Q6 
Oakwood Court 


DRATERS 

RANGEN. INC. 
L0N041AUL DRIVERS 
NEEDED. 


No futura in the prosont ' 


CNA's, LPN-s andRN's Human Resources ^ijabo. Buhl. Casllolord, curronlly looking for Oakwood Cuun 

also homo health nufsas. Twm Falls, ID. 83303-0409 oeoS^e nanX u 'ndependont Walking 2*00Bik. Rusty Court 

FX,.«aaH,«,aa.aw, I I308,737.3„3 I ' Snl.SltnK ,a:"H“.aa“'&K5 In .hi TOO Sft, flas.y tnna 


work with usi Epm more 
dottars end raceivo all 
bonofits. toduding 
rttodical. dental, and lilo 


Accopting applications for insurance, paid vacation, 
toncHuul drivers. Class A and holidays. - j 


Top pay. Jobe through 
out Magic Volley. 
Panonnel Plus, 
733-7300 

.... 6764400 


&^lear driving record JCf^nneyStyllngSalon ASPENGROVE in homo 


rjtoulred. Avarago days 
wl: 7-10. 95% no-touch 
tltighL Paid vacatton, si^ 
lAve, holidays. Medical 


Magic Valley Mall 
1615 Pole Line Rd. 
Twin Ftlle, ID 63355 
208-734-0833 


(208) 737-2113 
FAX (208) 737-2741 ‘ 
Employment Lino • 
(208) 737-2775 
connioboOmvTinc. 
gon.kf.us 

rPEDPLE UNITED " 
TO CARE- 
EOE 


nlghlhours. Eko.Wonoodcorrospon- 

App^ in person 1 1 1 South dents to cover govern- 
Park Avo. West mont mootings end wnlo 

RETAIL CLi^ ^ ' foaiures about inioresiing 


Looking for individual for i^PPoning in their Park Ave- Burton Avo. 200-400 Mommgsida Dr 

uhiquo gift'shdp in Ketch- ' F®*",f"wifiiwrWoTo'iook“ "WflsfSlsr-Sf.-lV, fdi/T ""‘*00 blk'ef'Wak'cfield 
urn lo help in invonterv '”fl peupio wiih solid 

orammar filtilk wFitmn . .. a-k, 


ROUTE 74^ 

1800 bik ol4ih Avo S 
400-500 bik ol Madrono 


teles, purchasing, sioek- j skills, writing 


to tooking tor | DRUG-FREE WORKPLACE | ing. o'lc, 40hr/wkT FT po- ability and a nose for 


irtsuraneoand401(k) 

pian. Apply In person or ueniaV ******** 
rfull resume lo Rangen, . . . , . , 


slaff to work in homos. 

• Flexible houfs,.PT/R, 
CNA's, NA's tg wort^in all 
of Magic Valley and 
Burley arae. For mere 


MISCELLANEOUS 
Maintenartce person lor 
chain ol C Bleros; 
Exponenee with gas 


Seuffi.BuW. Idaho 83316, 
EQUAL EMPLOYMENT 
OPPORTUNITY 
EMPLOYER 

OqpCHTO WORKPLACE 


Rangen, toformotton, call 934-5506 a plus, but ottl- 

Avenue or678-2955.M tudo more important than 



Center 
tolooUng lor 

LPN/RN to work 3 oventogs 
4 2 nl^t shirts 
. OREAT SCHEDULE -■ 
& SIGN ON SONUS 
CNA/NA'S needed for all 
shma 

$300 Sign on Bonus 
Social Smice dosigneo 
to work on our Behavior 
Cara Unit 
Pull Utrie. beneftte 


MEDICAL ' 

CNA'S 

Twin Falls Caro Center 


oxportonco. Musi have 
ctoan driving rocord and 
bo able to pass drug tost. 
Salary DOE.40tk. 


sllion w/boneliis. Com- 
pottlivo wage. 726-3474 
. or tax resume lo 726-3561, 


POUERELIE 

MOUNTAIN RESORT 
.now intorviowing lor sea- 
sonal Jobs. Sot. 12-Spm 
ot Albion Ml, Manor B4B. 


now has immediate open- medical, denial, company ? 

Inps for CNA'a for^y. * vohide, apply alBw^ 

ewmlno 4 night shift. SlinkorStatIon at1777 For Info. 206-673-6222 


nows to turn out timely 
stones that aro balanced, ' 
accurate and el intorost lo 
cur readers. Those inter- 
osted should send a re- 
sumo ond wntmg sample 
to: Sandy Miller. Assistant 
Cily Editor, The Times- 
Nows. P.O. Bex 546, Twin 
Falls, ID.. 83303: or call 
735-3204. 


IF you live in Iho 
BURLEY area S are 
iniarosied in being a 
Newspaper Garner, 
please contact the 
Burley Times-News 
oUice at677-4042 or 
Slop by the Burley ■ 
Oliice at: 325 '.t E. Sih 
N. (Nexi io Wal-mart.) 


> Sign on bonus 

> A positivo work environ- 
ment 

• Com potitivo salary 


The TImefNewe is ae- I 


available, compeUttvo • Tomilc bonelte wckago wpting applicaiwos lor a 

woges. sign on bonus includina PTO full-Umo Oistnci Manager, 


Heard the 
news? — 
Santa’is elves 

i_ are at 

American 
i Staffing! 
Stosd some extra 
:;lielpdorhigtli0 
tollilaitTCalliis! 
;We'll sendtlieni 
:• right am! 

: 734-6452 

UBiiiniTe«»iiii 


JAILER 

Jerome County ShonfTs 

al Deputies. Applications 

-wtfl5etakoounBI12/11/00 

Apply in person atr • medical 
300 N. Uncon, Jerome. House Manager. PRN at 
I DAMC Watkor Center In 

«-i^ e.™ Gooding. Call Tom Of 

• $100 -$750 Colhyat2O0-934-6461. 

CALL TODAY! medical 

734-4333 Immerfiata FT ond PT om- 

pioymont avail, lor CNAa 

MECHANIC working w/ dovolopmon- 

FuJ] time exportoncod tn>ck tally diaabled $6.50 
and farm equipmont OOE.BonoIits Incl. modi- 


and term equipmont 
mechonto. Apply at 
Smith EquipmOTt Co. 
361 S200W 
Rupert, 10 206434-4400 


• A Job whore you can mako 

a ditforonco in someone's bo able to work 

Irfo weekends, bo dopond- 

• Shift difforomial, ocoHont lime- 

— Stopby loron manogomeni skills, and 

application and'or inlontew working with youth. 

Twin Fella Care Center ' ^ outgoing personality is 

874 Eastland Drive ,2,'’'“®'. , , 

gQP This entry loitoljnanogo;. 

■monl pdsfiion includes re- 

MEDICAL sponsibililios In managing 

House Manager, PRN ol youth 4 adult carriers. 

Watkor Center In solos promotions, 4 pro- 

Gooding. Call Tom or viding oxcoUonl customer 

Cathyat206-934-6461. service. II you aro Inlor- 

S Snrrl i ®" aPPikte- 

fi ^u n r rr ..x- err twnby Do<»mbor0, 2000. 

Immerfioto FT ond PT om- The Vmee-Newa 
pioymont avail, lor CNAa Attn: Dan Walock 
working w/ dovolopmon- p o Box 548 

Twin Falls, ID 83303. 

OOE.BonoIits Ind. modi- “A DRUB FREE 
cal 4 rotirDmonl. For info WORKPLACE'M 


cal 4 rotirDmonl. For into 
coll 324-9655 or Inquire 
in person O 1118 N. Lin- 
coln In Jerome. 



Minidoka Memorial Hospital 

b currently hiring for the foDowIng positions: 

LPN/RN EXTENDED CARE 
FuIl-timc/Pan-limc/PRN positions available 
on all shi^ in the Exlemkxl Cure Facility. A 
$500 SIGN ON BONUS is available for this 
position. 

ER CLERK 

PRN; Every other weekend. 16 hours. 

CNA MEDICAL FLOOR 

FulI-timcTiay-shifl 

RN MEDICAL FLOOR . 

I PRN-EveningandDajrshiftrGB-amf' ^ — 

'Med/Surg. 

Interested applicants may contact 
Human Resources at 436-0481 or 
appljr in person 
M-F 9:00 am - 4:00 pm 
Equal Opportunity Employer ( 

Drug Free Workplace 



: Mountain View Care Center 

: A Small Community Family Oriented Fadlily 

Earn Extra Money For The Holidays — 

l:*RN/LPHPwtRme ‘CNAEvenmgs . 

I: * CN4 Fu ff nrp a ‘DlBtmaMheLDey.a.EvetwigSnn» 

- HofMlcaapInii n« n™ _ BONUS BANOE SSOOSIOOO 


I Cuitio Join Oiir F.imily Tcaiu - Very Co/npofifrVo 


Full benefits Indudlng 401k Educational AssisiaiKo 
• Call orCofiia li» And Visit CliKty Rtodel. Admlrilotritor 
X- orConni* Bteoa Al 433-6581 ^ 


• FTDblnrashcr 

_12JO-aOO 

• ITDletaiy Aide Shift 
Varies 9,-30-6:00 and 
2:00-8;00 

• PTCNA/CMA Needed 
In Assisted Using Facility 
4;00pm-9i00pm. 

BRIDGEVIEW 

OFFERS: 

♦ Tw Week Paid Vacjiion 
9 Sick and, HctxlayF^ 

♦ Paid Comp Devs lor 
Good Ailcndancc 

9 401K Retirement Plan 

♦ Health, Dental, and 
Upucal Insurance 

-♦-CoBcgc-Tuillon 

Assist^ (Scholanhip) 

To bscoRW pert o/ o«r 
'tssto apply In ylvnon-et 
Bridgevtew States 
lB28Brid6«vtewBhri 
T»taFaai.O) U301 
or caD 203-736-3933 
Ton Skemu D.OJL Ext 250 
(WttEiLlit ■ 


I'Randy Hansen Autoplex 
' Chevrolet/Cadillac 
Oldsmobile 

Corner of Blue Lakes and Polelinc Rd. 
Twin Falls, Idahp 

CAREER OPPORTUNITY 
-AT GM D^ILERSHIP- 

• LUBE TECHNICIAN 

• PORTER/WASHRACK 

experience required 

‘ Lxcellenl opportunity for 
advancement. Very competitive 
pay plans. Group Accident and 
Health Insurance, Paid Vacations, 
Paid Holidays and 40 IK plan. 

CONTACF: 

DOUG DOLDER 
■ '- SERVICE DIRECrOR ' 

208-733-3033 • ] -800-967-291 7 


St Bcnedlctt Family Medical Center 

““twTOPHOSHTW 

NEbtlU/ersslWjws 

Si. Boncdicts i.s ,i mission-driven Iw.tllh c.in* 
{’^■lIli/-Vivn..pimjding.paUOTtjocuscd_cnr\>.- 
We .ia- ItHikmj; for wring profi-s.sion.tb who.l 
w.inl lo work for ,i top oiulity he.tllh c.m- 1 
pro\-ider. , 

A. KN/ Acut’e C.ire - Si-ver.il rnwilioru. now 
.iv.iil.ible in htwpit.ll, PRN to full-time. . 
itependinK on .shift selected. Ot) 
experience pa-fern-d. Cura-nt KN licease 
a-^iiia-d. 

A RN or LPN w/ch.trve course - W.int 
^ Mime exiM hour. beu»a- the holid.ivs? 
hi-ver.u lempor.iry positions now ' 
o^v.iil.lblc with v.irious shifts in our Ume 
Term C.ia- Unit. Cura-nt license a\]uiaxi. 

A ACTIVITIES AIDE - F.icilit.ilo d.iiiy 
^ .iclivities for nursing f.icilily a-sidents lo 
include individu.il .ind ganin .iclivity 
sessions. B.ickj;a»und in cr.ifts; .iHlitv lo 
le.ich and p.ilk-nct.- with eldcrlv. 

Immi-diflteopeninc. 32 hourTrAveek Wllh- 

benefits. 

Compe-titive wages; benefib include 
mt-dic.il, v.ic.uion, holid.iys .ind 
retla-me nt.PosbQ£fcrd3tug-xtjeunme.jo.l— 
pa*-employment physical a-quia-d. Apnlv 
.11 St. Bt-nc-dicts F.imily Medic.il Center.* 

71)9 N. Lincoln. Jerome, ID ia\38. EOE 


. FILER (6) 

irkirkicirki 

THE TIMES-NEWS 
IS CURRENTLY 
LOOKING FOR 
INDEPENDENT 
NEWSPAPER 
. CARRIERS FOR 

- THE FILER AREA:- 

Walklng floufes 
Available 

- . - ROUTE 551 r 

100-600 6th Si. 
Raybom Circle 

ROUTE 553 

- —100 81k.- Davis ■ 
200-600 Nonh St. 

100 Bik. Ramsey 

ROUTE 569 

Midway West 
1000 Bik. 5th St. West 
' 400-500 Cantio 
300-600 Golden Spur I 
; -100-200 Siinip St 

II you live In this orea 4 ; 
nm Intonated in tfcing a \ 
newapeper carrier ... i 
Pleaae call DIatrlet ‘ ' 
Manager. 733-0931 I 

«xf. 347. I 

irkirkirkAl. 


ROUTE 

1300-1400 4th Ave. S 
100-400. bik Elm SI. 
100-500 bik Locust 
100-400 bik Walnut 

ROUTE 7^2 
I600-I700blk ol2nd 
Ave. E • I 
.1500-1700 bik of 3rd I 
■ Ave. E 1 
I500-/700bfk JfrtAvo | 
. Easf 

1500 bik Kimberly Rd 
200-400 bik Locust I 
200-300 bik Madrono j 

ROUTE 828 I 
100-400 Adams j 

; ROUTE 829 - . 

1 00-400 Jetterson 


ROUTE 409 
Park Ave- OvcitarxIAvt} 
Fairmont Dr.-W. 24ihSl 

IF you live in the 
BURLEY area & ate 
interested in bang g 
Newspaper earner, 
please epmciihe__ 
■ Burloyrimos-News 
office at 677-4042 or 
Stop by the Burley 
office at: 325':- E Sid 
N. (Next to Wai-mart.) 


aaa , leuu onyiano ur. 
tOO-400 Madison Street H300- UOO Washington 


THE TIMES-NEWS 
CURRENTLY HAS 
THE FOLLOWING 
INDEPENDENT 
NEWSPAPER 
ROUTES ON THE 
WEST SIDE OF 
TWIN FALLS 

ROUTE 801 
1500 Aspen St. 
1600 Cascade 
■ iSOOPondatosa 
iSoOSkyianoDr. 


SQUiem ■ ROUTE B52 

200-400 Monroe Strool 700-800 Meadows Dr 

•**- — TOO-BIk-Wasrnngion N 

■ ROUTES^ t 

700-800 Academic Dr ROUTE sqg 

700-800 Campus Dr tOO-400 Borah Wesi 

200-300 Meadows Ln ’00-300 W, soman 

300-800 Monrde . 

700-800 Quincy —60!JTBe72 - 

100-200 Univcrsnv Ave ^ North 

\ 200-300 Bik. Elaine Avc. . . 
If you Uva on the EAST 200-400 Bik. Falls Ave 


aide ol Twin Falls s are 
Intereated In being an I 
Independent newapa- 
per carrier.., 

Pleaae conlacl DIatrlet i 
Manager at 733-093 1 , 
ext 348 j 

I ★★★★★★★I 


tVesf 

■100-400 Bik RoPbins 
Ave 

700-800 81k. Sp:iiks St 

II you live on the iVexr 
side of Twin Falls S are 
infervafed In being a 
Independent r}cwsp.iper 

Pleaae confaef District 
Manager 

73J-D931. exf, J47 



is accepting applications lor Indcpt*ndcnt Motor 
— Routc-carriers-in-all an.Ms t)i ii’> distrihutiorTsystem: 
These contracted positions aa- 7 day early morning 
-delivery jxisitions,- and can cam SLtXX) - S2.1KK) &ver\- 4 
weeks, depending on the route. 

JLyou.,m--into^estlK1rplease-st'op-l>\*-lht^T■tme^^w^ 

al 132 3ai St. VViSt, Twin Kills and fill out -a contract 
. sheet or contact jackie in the cia.*ulation department at 

7334)93i;.e)cL3Ul I 



E6 Tlm”e8*N«w9. Twin Fail*, Idaho Friday, Dacambar 1, 2000 


JEST AVAILABLE CORY^ 


Local Homes And 


Properties Online 


(Mr to- www.magicvaliev.cbm 
tf^dr^“HOMESELLER” 


^ t Raal Estate •Centeiy 21, Greater Valley Properties • Centum 21 , Riverside • Gem Slate Realty 

Coldwell tenker Naniilnl Realty • D.R. Cute Co. • Sliver Saga Really • Bra'wley Really i Liz Gulch Real Estate 
Prudential, Idaho Homes • Magic Valley Really • Robert Jones Realty • Strickland Real Estate • Wills Really 
g^^^^^ld»ell Banker Curtis Realty •Irwin Realty 



A 


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is click. To find out more, call today! 


L or more information, call 733-0931. 


^http://www.magicvalley.com — - 

Your #1 choice for online ciassifieds. www.classifiedwarehouse.com 


Con Paulas in Jerome 


.SS«'"'YlflR-lllD ■ ■' 

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!!fEW2001 CHEVROLET 
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M OtikitramAtinnif 


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a 2001 CHEVROLET 


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V6 Engine, Auto Transmistloiv AUni CO Rt)cr, 
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324-3900 polac 


■ulos.com <Y>0'(Uv0Ml(MUM 

SHORT DRIVE FROM ARYWHERE IN THE MAGIC VAUEYl 

■ A0EXPIRESDECEMaER6.?(iOO • 



FAX 

YOUR 

AD 


304 

INVESTMEWTS 


GUARANTEED 

PUBUC SERVICE AH 

MESSAGE 

Gig profits usually moan _ 
big risk. Berora you do Buy the Guaranteed 


TIMES CLASSIFIED 

department 

20B-734-5538 

OR 

20B-677-4543 

(BURLEY) 


business with a company, 
chock it out with Iha Bet- 
lar Bualnesa Bureau. For 
Irao Information about 
avoiding Investment 
scams, write to the Feder- 
al Trade Commlaalon, 
Washington, O.C., 20580, i 
or call the National Fraud I 
Information Canter, I 
1-800-876-7060. 


package and The 
Times News guar- 


itmea News guar- 
antees to sell mer- 
chandise or 
automotive Items 
In 7 days and real 
estate in 15 days 
or we will rerun 
the ad an addltiorr- 


BUY THIS HOME FOR 
CHRtSTHASf 
Doublowldo, 4 bdrm, 2 
bath, family room, dining 
room, garden tub.tthia 
home has $10,000 worth 
of extras. 1760 sq ft of 
beauty. Call WaatWInd 
Komta 208-732-6710 or 
1-eSS41P4037 
CHRISTMAS PACKAGES 


We have tond/home pock- 
agoe available. All you 


aI7days. There 

is a W’extra „ 

charge for the E^wiLvourcMiudia 

twfftadOmk^ru^ ' 

maybeMncelled 2 possible a bg|m; 

3arty for customer water share. Landscatied 

convenience out yard w/sprlnWer system, 

the charge Will Apppraisai ai'tios.ooo, 

remain the same. wfit aeii for isv.ooo. No 

down payment necessary. 

731-5092 Of 734-7621- 


★★★★★★ 

Tha Timet-Newi Is 
currently looking for 
Independent Walking i 
Route Carrlen In the I 
RUPERT area. 


305 

CONTRACTS & 
MORTGAGES 


have to do la choose your 
homo and tall us where 
you want to live. Lefus do* 
the rest. Financing 
Bvailable. Can WestWl- 
nd Homes 20S-732-ni0 
orl-eSS-310-9037 i’ 


$$CA8H NOW$$ 

For Contracts & Mortgages. 
Call DIvanIflad Capital. 
20S-734-3727m 


RUPERT 

BQumm ■ 

8U) St. - Canal 
FSI.-KSI. 


DRACO 

INVESTMENT CORP. I 


the charge will 
remain the same. 


IF you live In the 
RUPERT area A ere 
Intereated In being e 
Newapeper Carrier, 
pleaae eontect the 
Burley Tlmea-Newe 
- orWceaf677-4M2or 
elop by the Burley of- 
tlceal:325HE.SthN. 
(Next to Wel-marf.^ 


Oaads of trust? 
You want to sail? 

■ Wa want to buy, 
Prompt & cosh offsrs. 


b«tt buys In SAnqUM' i* 
dassnsd Find your tr«M- 
ura tedsy. CU 7330831/ 


WaarelocalScompsllttw. **5,000 HonwLAcraega! QOV’T FORECLOISed • 
Call20S.733-3S2l. 2.5 acrta w/wster aharas, HOMES-Lowor^Mdfi^ 

a Trv4/4BI... . COrrSlS. DSttura. OlrthkVt* 


Call 206-733-3S2I. 

R. Todd Blass. Prssidant I 
Richand B. Stivars. V.P. I 
T.W. Stlvsfs, SecyTreaa. 1 


upgraded windows, super jy-SOl-^7T7. e«- S297.M 
ef riclsni heat pump, HAQERHAN, For sale or 


★★★★★★ 


GEM 


STATE REALTY, INC. 

734-0400 HAOERMAN. 3 bdrnt. 2 

CHECKOUrygErtEW ScT«°r,Ss'Sj 


$250 dep. rent eS6-2594.M 
HAOERMAN. 3 bdnn. 2 
bath, H acre lot In now 
•ubdivlaion, $99,500 or 
trade. Cal 20e-73&C142.a 


501 

OPEN HOUSES 


301 

BUSINESS 

OPPORTUNITIES 


Iota, S12SK. BS3-2430JI 


BEST ROUTE IN TOWN 
$3,00(Vino (reaiislie) . 
20 Vending sites, 
no compoiliion. 6 hrsTmo.. 

$9,600 cash rsquired. 
^S0^266-6601 (24hrs.)M i 


Plaaso chack your ad lor 
conectnats en me first 
day that It runs, as The 
Timas-News-is noi re- 
sponsible ter errors sl- 
ier that time. 


GREAT Opponufiiryl Busy 
Seien, lease own room. 
Hair Stylist. Nail Toch-or 
Massage Therepiel. Can 
733-4008. 


1 502 
• HOMES FOR SALE 


Super 2-stoiy home almost HANSEN-Nica clean, 3 
completely remodeled - 

lovely rock llrepisee. 4 etc. Maycany. 734-3110 
JEROME 3 bdrm, 1 bath, 
wrth fully fenced comer tel dbl. lot. IS'xSr ahop 

/V .. B *64,000. 280-2B00 (»ll) 

calf Penny 83W3S4 Jerome 6 bdrm. 2b:&.i 
Exceptional family home in ** '*• 

Wmbetly area - 4 bdrmi. 

2 bathe, comer lot. greal *< S9^0W^ CqH 324-d}76 


PUBUCSERV1CB 

MESSAGE home at 255-Cedar Park Ing room, -1012 eafi 

SeiiinaptbpeiryT'Donlpay Circle pi^to aall.ai -.MlAOiAMIe wk£- 3 
feee until NY *oW. For only *125,000." - - ' * '"SSc’SrtoSiLw 
> Information ibo'ul C*ODoog7Ji>«TI ' i2BOeQfl7sS4,500,Tteu^ 


kitchen for onfv Mfi.iw) oral dehihie.tripod.edm -I 

Cell Jim 733-9633 SAVE THOUSANDS FOR 
VK. CHRISTMAS -Sln-gle. 

3 bdmi.. 2 .bBih ..wida«3bdrm,2baih,-dir>-^— 


302 \ 

I MONEY TO LOAN 


ConilnenuiLoena 
$100-5500 
Phone applicaiione 
welcome 

Cell Today. 735-0892. 


free Information kbo'uf CaODe^7$i>«2rt 
avoiding tlmeehare and 

reel estate scams, write BRAWLEY REALTY 


bdn«:<»#.NrQ kitSen. 
12B0 *0064,500.^. 
btowido > 4 bdm. 2;Mth 


to the Federal Trade 
CommiBilon, Washing- 
ton. O.C„ 20560, or call 
me National Fraud Intor- 
matlonCenier. 
1.600-876-7060, 


$67,900. Can WaetWlnd 
Homea 206-732-571Q or 
1-888-316^7 


•eonomieet Contof/Homo, Acre- 


age Rent/Sell 733-i;S9 


TTCJaClC^ClGa [I^CI^mcDEF^ 

IL I N C O L N? 

TUlilM SHS liiliyuiB 



36 moni'i. 12,000 mile* per year, $3,000 ap reduction and tax-title-doc fre $1 19. 


2001 Lincoin Nuvigalor _ 


■< -i.. 7.r -Wi 


-^'honth,12,OOOmiIesper)-car.S5f)OOoiprecluaionandtax-tiile-docfee$119 

THEiSgM MOTONS USED VEHiCtES 

'97 Honda Ovk »».'07‘97HondaavkEX l»»i«‘97HondaAca)idU|»ja:47'99HondaAccordlX 

^ff,49S H19XFi2,^95 


^*•1 'MFotd\YindjUfLX *«coa-i "MMcrcaiy Villager GS «<«q 5 Y7 Honda Accord EX »«i(»-i*99Mit*ulmhiEdi 

“M.99S m,995 >15,99S ^1S. 

MTai Ea-Cab «oiu WHondiArariEX LSpart •iiiusi '98 Mercury Mounafawt «n)'f9F-2S0&C4x<RMrSDc^ 

^20,99S ^20,995 ^20,999 ^27,999 



738-7700 or 1-000-316-7708 






TWIN FALLS BrVA. 3 
" •Wftn..2htth.lfl.lot Jf<J 
Woodrt^Dr. S21B.OOO 
Caa?34-ffi17*, 

TWm FAU^ • 2 bdrm., 1 
bath, fancad back yard. 
- - 1062 Mapta Ava E. Call 
543-6863 ask for Connta. 

■ TWIN FALLS • Condo 2 
bdrm., t bath. Wood 
> ,ttova, tiled kJtchon & bam.' 
'Cloaa to CSI. S55.000. 
Can 733-0606 ahar 5. ■ 
TWIN FALLS • Now 2800 
aq ft homo w/4 bdnn. 3 h 
bam. 2 masters suite, on 
, "J acre private,- woll and 
septic, wW> malnlonartca 
(roe exterior, gas tiro- 
place. $220,000. 1120 
, : 'JJasort View Or. 733-9 1 66. 
1WIN FALLS " 

DONT MISS OUT on thb 
exceptional condo at 
'Rock Garden • comer unit 
. wllh great view ol gotl 
course. Completely re- 
' modeled end priced at 
only $114,500. 

. CalUack 733-7151 

BRAWLEY REALTY 

734-5S58 


TWIN FALLS -By Bunder 

648 Sristlecone. Open 
house, 1 -3 pm. Sat & Sui. 
$105.000. 735-2422 
TWIN FALLS 
HAVE YOU SEEN THIS 
..BEAUTY?? Lovely4 
bdrm. 2 bam home with 
RV parking and tennis 
court Beautiful entry wWi 
two useable decks. Mod- 
- voted seDer wfl consider 

reaaonableollers. 

$129^ 

Con Jim 7334633 

BRAWLEY REALTY 
734-5858 
fwm FALLS 
POSSIBLE LEASE-OPTION 
on this great acreage - 
home haa3bdrms, ilk 
baths end large shop. 
Priced at 1112,900. 

Can Jim 731-3096 

BRAWLEY REALTY 

734-5636 

TWIN FALLS 

Retirees would you liko to 
bvo broo to leave your 
homo without worry about 
mo yard. This Is the place 
for you. 


uyui .. oraroon. j - Met 3 bedtooia. I bilb 
^ hem »«h.io.v u«.„. . home ia Lsiy J Mobile Home 
Home mi; hi,e f„,ure • pjrf;. iherCT it a ceiliB| fia io 
poffBtu h<fhc>i boi uve ot • ijviaj ,oobi_ SoBih ridde of 
commfrcwtorpei.fm.«uJ(>rr« J home hav a cotered p»iio, 
loe«ilo..L«.ofcrari«tun.h,pon, Home haa «ia)l iidia| 
* h.iiif room »i «tii • tuct'iM, melal roof ud a 
iHiih-U c*hi»«ir). There It a « t«amp air eoadiiioaef oa 
fimrlr room do»«uir», • roof.SI2.300. MLS 96979 


7Vtr|NFALL»ForaaIeby 
owner. 4 bdrm.,- 2 bath. 

. Newty rsmpdoled. great 
locatfont Reduced to 
$104,000. Call 733-3700 
and see 01411 AltairDr. 
T^FALLS^byow^ 
er. New, 4 bdrm., 2 bath. 
1473 Saddler St Approx 
—1400 eq.- fL-+ dU gorage.~ 
AC, fenced back yard, 
sprinklara. Musi movol 
Will tacrilica $97,600 
43t-02Uor 735-1654 .■ 
“twin FALLS. 3 bdrm. t 
bam. 1600 sq.ft Now 
windows, paint, vinyl, 
malntertarico froo oxtortor, 
quiet neighborhood. 
$67,500. CaO 734-8727.« 
TWIN FALLS. 4 bdrm. 2 
I bam, tri-leyel home w/RV 
I poTklr>g. on 54 acre comer 
' loi. Additional U aero 
avollablo, $99,500. 911 
Lavina Ave. 733-9372J 
TWIN FALLS. ACT NOW! 
2700 sq. It. 4 Ig. bdrm. 
find, master suits w/ walk- 
in doeet»14 bam) 2 addi- 
lional baih, 2 oversized 
living areas, dining rm., 
huge laurrdry/sew rm.. Ig. 
•hopmobbyrm., 2 car ga- 
rage. built In storage 

f ialoro. Covered patio, 
oncod park Gko bodryord. 
heat pump/AC. sprinkler 
system, pellet stove. OW- 
closo to shopping, 
schools. A must soo 
OSI19.000. 733-ige2.a 
TWIN FALLS, Need 6 
bdrms. + 2 baths?? 

H bioefc from school, 

2nd homo in back brings 
$320/mo. S69.B00. 
Nsison Raalty 734-3930. I 


OOOOIHO- Norm of town, 
4 bdrm., on 1 acre. AT 
•prinktofs. Beautifut land- 
-Scaped, horsa pasture. 
Caa 934-4656. ■ 
KAOERUAN-Iot- 50x1^ 
sewer & watar pd. mfg 
OK. $17.500. 637-640Z 
.JAZELXON..10 acres; 

poved road, power, wa- 
tor. $14,900. 82S-5617.W 
JEROME-2 yr old homo. 
1 800 ag. ft, 1 .3 scree. Be- 
tween TF & Jerome. Sm. 
down, take ovor pymts, 
BSSum..loan. 7344672 ■ 
TWIN FALLS 

20 ACRES 

• City Water 

* Natural Gas 

* Irrigation Wolor 

• West RIor Avoouo 
731 -5030 Of837-6313 

i ^ I 

INCOME raOPERTY 

TWIN FALLS - -Tlndot 
Blocka7“ Chock rolurn 
on now 4 piox. Call Chock 
7330207B 

” TVflN FALLS - Great 

toveefmenf/ Olfico suilo 
I in Blue tokos oflico park. 

I Cwnwr/weda (o. 
rt/M capftaf. 

Fricod to soli O $75 000 
Cal 733-2323 or 733-7051 
TWIN FALLS, duplox. 2 
bdrm.. 1 both, garago. 
$89.000. Coll 326-3712.B 
TWIN FALLS-Roducod 
ownor-moving. Country 
4-pIox. 3 bdrn,. 2 bath 
5*oc. 3250 N 2300 E. 
Con subdivido. S220k. 4 
moro house sites avail. 
7332033 or 420-4400S 


FAX 

YOUR 

AD 

TIMES CLASSIFIED _ 
DEPARTMENT 

208<734-5538 

OR 

208-677-4543 

(BURLEY) 

521 I 

MANUFACTURED 
HOMES 

^R SANTA 
I h^o 0 fabulous 3 bdrm, 2 
b'alh. 1280 sq ft homo 
with brgo kitchen & din- 
ing room wailing for a 
family. Smcoroly 
WestWInd Horim 
206-732-5710 or 
1-888-310-9037 
GIVE A GIFT OF LOVE 
Booutiful doublo wido with 
garden tub. oak pabmots. 
family room, 4 bdrm 2 
I balh, 1760 sq ft. Call 
WsstWInd Homes 206- 
I 732-5710 or 1-888-310- 
9037 

WE ARE HERE TO STAY! 
Wo soi-up & dolrver m ram, 
sleet Of snow. Nothing 
slops us Irom goitmg you 
, In your now homo. Call 
WestWInd Homes 206- 
7324710 or 1-888-310- 
.9037 


HANSEN.2bdrm.ln 
country. $350 (plus or ml- 
nu8)5dop. 423-S67f 
HANSEN Nee 2 bdrm, mo- 
bllo homo. Apple, incl. 
storoQo.no pots 4234104 
HANSEN- culo 1 bdrm, 
$350*dop. Wolor. sowor. 
-Qafbayt pd, 423-4509. ■ • 
HA2ELT6 n. Nco 2 bdrm. 
oloc.. oppls., carpofl. Tiro- 
place, no pots. 423-5104. 
J^RCme Sxiro nico. 3 I 
bdrm, 2baih. dbl. wido 
Gdod area. $475/rrx)mh. 
No pots, refs, 326-5887 
JEROME 2 bdrm. i bam 
Bosomont. $525/mo. 
Cleaning dop, 324 84 78 
JEROMd- M^ik) homo m 
counlry. 3 bdfm.. 2 bam, 
wood stove, $450/mo, 
S300 dopRot foq 324-33 1 4 
I JEROME. Cloon 2 bdrm. m 
I country. $450 ♦ dop. No 
pets. Rols. 324-5028 ■ 
KIMBERLY 2 bdrm. m 
coufttry. Sowor. water, 
garbage. lawn care 
lurnlshod. $395/mo. . 
$250 dop. & rols 423-4077 




Twin Falte, Waho E7- 

WlilLLS €AR«0 

4;place SnowmDbile Trailer 


K.,“( • Tnaiott Bart m 

a y!' • DiulTnIlar Bnktt ' 1 

I few 

^3L/ 


»Ot a. Lincoln • JEPOMe W 

3T4-3900 O 

@ Mercury 


















EBTlmea-Newa. Twln Falla, Idaho Friday, Docem bar 1, 2000 



I 2001 SUBARU 


"When I'm not Uianted at all, I’m 

' thanked enough,- 

I’ve done, my duty. and Fvc-done 

nqmore," - - 

— Henry Fielding 

'■Did you make the ri^t guess 
on board 19?” asked an unhappy 
West player. 

1 , "I didn't have to guess,” replied 
rnis friend. "Thanks to my part- 
ner’s illuminating spade plays, I 
had no trouble finding the setting 
trick.” 

The first West player led his di- 
amond 10 to East’s ace. and East ’ 
cashed the spade ace and contin- 
ued witli the 10, South’s queen go- 
ing to Wc-st’s king. With three de- 
fensive tricks home, West had to 
decide whether the setting trick 
was in spades or in clubs. He 
made the wrong choice. Assuming 
his club winner could not disap- 
pear, he tried to cash his spade 
jack, but it didn’t survive. South 
ruffed, cashed his trump ace, and 
discarded all of dummy’s clubs on 
his high diamonds to make his 
game. 

"It wasn't your fault,'.' consoled 
his friend. "You made the correct 
theoretical choice. When E^ast re- 
turned the spade 10, you had 
cvet7 reason to believe he had no 
more than three spades," 

How^iid the other East player 
defend to make things easier for ■ 
the thankful West? Instead of re- j 

— tiirning-thc-spade-10"artrick"~< 

three, he returned the deuce. The < 
deuce promised either four 
spades or two. making the club 
ace the odds-on play. C^hing the 
club ace loses only.whcn South 
has a -l-S-t-O distribution with sol- s 
id diamonds — Jess than a 1 per- " 
cent probability. " 


NORTH iM 

A 7 5 4 
¥ K J 9 6 4 2‘ 

♦ 7 

A K Q 0 

■ WEST EAST 

A K J 6,3 A A 10 9 2 

¥ 5 V 3 

♦to 98 AAS432 

AA 10 853 AJ94 

SOUTH 
A Q8 

¥ A.Q 10 8 7 • 

♦ K Q J 6 
A 72 

Vulnerable: East-West 
Dealer South 

The bidding; 

South West North East 
l¥ Pass 4¥ All pass 

Opening lead; Diamond 10 

BID WITH THp ACES 

iM-n 

South holds: 

A K J 6 3 

¥ 5 

♦ 10 9 8 
A A 108 S3 
North South 


ANSWER: Three clubs. Warn 
partner atwul preference for, 
suit play. His next bid should 
clarify matters. 


twin falls. 3 acios. 3 
bdrm. 1 bath, $650. 738- 
0322. 2787 E 3300 N. 
TWIN FALLS. 3 bdrm. 2 
bmh. tripio qaraQQ. home 
'In Condloridoo. No 
emoklnfl, no pels. $1200/- 
mo.Coll KonlorCincIvBt 
733-5336 or 734-6104. 
TWIN FALLS. 3 bdrm. 3 
both, cuslom homo, sw^ 
mirtg pool, hoi tub. largo 
dock, custom moaler 
bath, formal dfaitng. living, 
don, no amoklng/pots. 
Sl000«dop. Avaiioblo 
Docombor lal. CoM 
731-1700.H 

TWiN FALLS. 953 Sparks. 
Now 3 bdrm. 2 bath, 
washor/dryor. AC. dbl go- 
rogo, quiotnolghbothood. 
loncod yard. No smokmg 
or pots. $825 plus utiiiiios. 
Call-colioct 208-788-2643 

Of 734-8751 ■ 

TWN FALLS. Newer homo 
with conyon rim viows. 

3 bdrm. 2 both on 1 ocro. 

S1400/mo. 

Call Kent or CIrKty 
733-5336 or 734-6104 
I WENOELL-3 bdrm. 1 bath. 
$600/rno.+S600 dop. No 
smoklnp/pata. S36-2744« 


POPLAR OROVE APTS 


CloM. ^nlQdrm opts 
Forserdora/ 
Homficapped/tHsobled 
persona. 
SornowithAC 
Rent Based on Income 
Contact Office ai 
733 E 22nd SLBunoy 
208-678-0429 


RUPERT 

TeUng applications for 

walUngHsL f &2bdmi. 
opts. VaOey Park Apts. 
438-5882 

RUPERT “ 

Taking applications lor 
woHinaNsL 1.2,&3bdim. 
apartments. Souihwood 
Apartments 43 66226 

^Hear ttie quiet! 

P&rk Apartments 

176 Maurice Street 
Twin Fells 
734-410$ 

TWIN FALLS Studio, $295 
* dop.'lM pd. 761 Main 
W. No pots. Cell 326-4477 
^IN FALLS 


1 603 
furnished APTS/ 

DUPLEXES 

TWIN FALLS 2 bdrm. 2 
both. No smoking/pots. 
Call 734-8007 loavo msg. 
TWIN FALLS. 1 bdrm. apt. 
No pois./lnquiro at 503 
.3rdAvo. E..Tw>n Fells. 10. 


.•Irnd bndtr rranitotutaTke Am. PO DaSIMI 
tlichinim TX KotX cnriouni • 10 m<( 

• liRiivrt ravrlopr lornply 

CopynchlOaaa. Uluuel>•turvS;1wlat^lnc 


KIMBERLY. 4 bdrm. houso 
with garago. S9t0.00. CoN 
733-7445. boforo 5 p.m.S 
TWIN FALLS ^ 
Brand new 3 bdrm. 2 bath 
Broekonridgo homo, 
StSOO/monih. Includes 
lawn caro & amoniiios. 
shon form OK. Call Kent 
or Cindy Collins al 733- 
5336 or 734-6104. 

TWIN FALLS Newer 3 
bdrm, 2 baih, Irg homo. 
Living rm. family rm, Irg. 
kilchon, fircplaco. Ouilc 
aroa. SnOO/mo ♦ $1000 
dop. 736-0706, 420-070S 
TWIN FALLS ■ 

— 1606 Shop Avo; Eosi • nice 
3 b m., 2 baih with cov- 
ered carport. SS50 * dop. - 

229 Ash • 3 bdrm., 1 bath, 
ready lor occupancy. 
SSOO.dep 

442 Lecusi 45 • culo 1 
bdrm., 1 bom. $300 * dop 

-1636 8ih Avo. East • nice l 
bdrm.. i baih. S300 * dop 

BRAWLEY REALTY- ' 
734-S8S8 
Eves & weekends 
324-4603 Dave 


) PAUL • Homo in couniry. 3 
II bdrm. Call 438-5234. 

! twin FALLS -1 bdrm 
Clean carpeted, oppfo, 
1 mil, pd. $275, 324-3317. 

. TWIN FALLS ♦ 2 bdrm.TpI 
i lal olocl. Pol. roq. $495 * 
dop. Call 734-5063 am ■ 

■ iV/IN FALLS • 3 ♦ bdrm,: 
brick in country. Family 
rooms. 2V, baths, dbl. 
garage. Avail. 1/t.S97S • 
dop. Call 733-4605. ■ 
twin falls • Cozy 1 
bdrm., appis, carport, 
siorago, $375 * dap. 

ALSO N«o2bdrm„ alllho 
amoniiios. appis.. garago 
.carport. $600.t.dop.Musi. 
300 to appreciate. No 
smokingrpots, 734-7S71.R 
TWIN Falls • For roni. 
clean, unlurhishod, 3 
bdrm. t baih. SSSO*uiils. 

Calloliflf6pm, 732-6002. 

TWIN FALLS • LOvOly SpO- 
Cious. 2 bdrm, 2 bam. all 
.appis, .^c. sprinklers, 
(awn mowing, waiof and 
sanitaiion lurnishod. No 
pels, no smoking. $600 
_mo. » dop. Applicniions' 
laKon, Cafl 732-8388,« ■ ' 
TWTn falls 1 bdrm 

Avail, now, 105 Madison. 
5375* dop. 734-1465 


) TWIN FALLS 196. 5650. 

Vo7 nice 4 bdrm. 2 bam. 

; appis. 2 car garage 
w/oponora. Ig. lanced yd. 
w/sprinklors and 
swimming pool. 
ELWOOOA EVANS 
734-1401 

TWIN FALLS 

911 Woodrfvor Or., 3 bdrm. 
2both. 1 eargarago.Saw- 
toom 8 0'Loa7 schools. 
$725.00 per mo. plus dop. 
No.smoking, no pels. 
Conlaci Wail 737-3939, 
Com Stale Roaity. 

TWIN FALLS 

V07 nice. 5 bdrm. 2b bath 1 
horrfo wiih 2 car garago. I 
-No*t-toCSl'campus7 
$f.t00/mo. plus doposii. 
No smoking, no pois. Call 
Noil St 734-6500 days 8 
734-1329 Ovonings. 

TWIN FALLS. 3 bdrm., 2 
bom. 1 yr. old. garago. 
AC. sm. loncod In lot, 

I $650 mo. * $500 doaning 
' ' dop. N0P0IS..734-5979... 
TWIN FALLSTO bdrm” 
bam. 2 car garago. appl., 
sioyo. qulol.no!ghbor-_ 
_hocfd.'S725.-**dop. &.UI1I... . 
no smoking. 578-240 1 .■ 
TWIN FALLS. Goto. 1 
bdrm., appis.. w/d hook- 
up. avail, immod.733-6563 


BURLEY 

Taking applicaiions ror 
wnilinghsi.i.2.*3bdrm. 
opts. Mountain Votw East 
, I 676 9141 
fcUfcN • Lg 2 bdrm. upstairs 
api. $275 4 $150 dop.. 
taurfo7 handy, 423-5670. 
flLEH. 2 bdrm. E*e. areoi 
close schools, loncod yd. 
No smokingrpets. $570 * 
dop. Some utils paid. 
Avail now. Lolsof pnvocy.' 
Pieoso call 206 -539-5676. 
COODINa - NiC0. Clean. 1 
bdrm, waiof. trash paid. 

, $3SO*dop,208.S78-90et. 
GOOOING. 2 bdrm. 1 bath. 
S350/mo. ♦ dop. 'Some 
uiiiiifos paid, aecass to 
laundry room. No pots. 
934;9290. leave msg.S 

★★CHRISTMAS** 

SPECIAL! 

Move in by Oocomber 
— — 2Sihipay-^ 

$99 

on your 1st month's rent 
LAUREL PARK 

apartments 

178 Msurlce St N. 

Twin Fslls, 734-4195 
JEROME -Hoaldoan 142 
bdrm apis, subsidized 
whan avail, according 10 
I mcomo. Playgrounds, ail - 
l^kltchon appis. -laundry- - 
rms. No pois. 324-3464. ' ; 
JtHOHE- 2 bdrms- 
Many oxiras. 

Call324-4654of324-2643.- - 


No 1 bdmi apt. $335 

!■ 2 bdnn apt. $440 

3 3 bdrm apt $495 

Bright. Spockxa & Cloan. 
Sorno OishwashorB& 
Hookups Avaiiebla. 

No Pats. 

‘ Cett 7346680 NOW! 

Q Onfalls 
a AFFORDABLE 

i3 Noworl. 2&3bdrm. 

} .oporinHtntswlth2battu.. 
- All appliances, spacious. 
Cell Now 734-1600 
TWIN FALLS ’ 

Garden Apts. Quiet. 

J attractfvo 3 BMroom. 1 

baih. Microwave. DW. 
Iaund7 facility, no pets 
I. Call Today, 736-7105 

4 TWIN falls" 

Saratoga Apfo. 
j Fintm Apt. commuhrty tuu 
a low I & 2 bodronn units 
ovailable. CaU 735-1600 
• tor appointment. 

■ TWIN FALLS 

. Stare Apte. 232- 2nd Avo. 
N. Includes complimonta- 
7 laundry factl)tios.-S300 
4 dop. ColonMApt$. 
203 4|h $t. N. S28S 4 
dop., Indudos hoot 
BRAWLEY 
REALTY 
734-5658 

iwiN FALls - 4 arena 
N«w* - 3 bdrm. 2 baih. 
garago. $650 up. 370 
Lenore. Call 733- 6207M 
TWIN FALLS - 1 bdrm apt. 
non-smoking, kitchen ap- 
pliancos. central vac. near 
downtown & court house. 
-$3^ -r^etecirlclty 6 
"'deposit. Ambrican Real 
Esiato 734-5650. 

TWIN FALLS'. 2 bdrm, 1 
bath. apt. AC. OW. w/0 
kitchon appis.. carpon & 
storage unit. No smek- 
ing/pets. Call 735-0473 m 

TWIN FALLS' Nearest. 

Like new. large 1 bdrm. 

' Dsmi. apt. W/0 hookups. 

I aliappis. Sulils.lncl. - 
Central AC 6 heoL 
-S4254der-Musisoet — 

— Collnovi-f'3 1-9410.»- — 
TWIN FALLS • Newer 2 
bdrm. duplex, coiport. util, 
rm. No smoklng/poie, 
-$42S/rno..Catl 733-3742B 


TWIN FALLS 

NIco 3 bdrm. Ihbolh wtm 
'Covered patio $5504 dop. 
Cute 1 bdmi. 1 both, V07 
private. $300. * dop. 
1636 8th Ava. East 
Honey Locuat 716‘x i1, 
Iheso unlie ore VERY 
CLEAN. 2 bdrm units with 
storage - $450 4 dop. 
Paredlae Place 1102 • 2 
bdrm. 2 bath with all op- 
plicancos • $550 4 dop. 
BRAWLEY REALTY 
734-6858 
TWIN FALLS “ 

The Falls Apts. 
ThanksgMng Special 

2 bdrm. opts, avaiiabla. 
734-8600 

TWIN FALLS. Urge, 
newer 2 bdrm., bam 6 a 
H. iownhouso. $525 4 
dop. Call 734-4120. 
TWIN FALLS' Large 2 
bdrm. 4-pIox. Near C.S.I. 

I $450 4 dop. 

Call 734-4120. 

TWIN FALLS. Now 3 bdrm 
2 both. Central healing 
and AC, garage, deck. 
Relrig.. range, DW, W/0 
hookup. 377 MomJngsido 
Or. «3. $595 par month. 
Can Tracey at 738-8503. 
TWIN FALLS. 2 4 3 bdrm. 

I bath duplex, garego, 
NE oroo. $525 A $575 
w/5350 aocutl7.736-9269. 



i m 


; St??!. CANYON MOTORS 

''^'gmzaaa 

pUI I'ulls Avi-mu- • I’win I'jill.x • T.’l l-HSIII) 


facto7 Imdce May Not Beftea Deal 
Advotised pricing o 


I ^°l>>^^0IATEDEUV£RY- 6RkATSeiECn0N Ot 

O^GE RAM 2500 PICKUP^ 

CUMMINS 
TURBO 
DIESEL 
ENGINES! 





, Call Barry, Jeff 

or Manuel 
Today at 733.S776! 

- ^ P - IS _ 

'iiittik am ittiiiiy ^ 

r- '.Stl'^TSLER - PLYM0UT|T“ 

D^GE » JEEP « DODGE TRUCK 


510 2nd Ave. S. • Twin FdRs, Idob • 733-5^8 


IN TWIN EnUS...CONrauuiS VOIKSWAGEN 4^ 

YEAR END 2 
CLEARANCE 

IE DEALER HAS IT ALLl 

'i^2ooivwjErn 

IW IxsiA Autorretic. Air 

Ciiaas Rjyef,.,tO YearflCWOO Ift 

WASJIIUOO ^ 

NOW...SJ7495- 






2001 Honda Accord, 4dr LX 




^_^39 iDonihs, 12,000 milo per year, SIJOO ap reduction and tax-mlc-doc fee SI 19 . 


■ J I~il° pn ye... SI JOO op reduaion -nj M.|iii.-Ax: fc sm. - C 


Civic LX 

^1X995 

TO-TO-)? Honda tord LX .Jam W Honda Accord LX .wi6'98 Hondo AcennP 


— 

MM-iaHondoOd^EX. IS'MI^.dltar.Drfa.d.rsfl 

^W,995 ^17.99S 


Prka do not indude tax, tide or $ 1 19 dealer doc fee 






. 701 -Main Ave' E 
Twin Falls, Idaho 


aSSI 








FfMiy^OKWbw 1,2000 Tlt»H»«wi. T»Ib FaUt. Idaho E-9 


V 


* 1 • 


DODGE - CHRYSLER 
PLYMOUTH 

"1999 
"2999 
^2999 
"1299 
"3199 
"2999 
M999 
I "3999 

"1299 
"4999 
"4299 
■ '';«®2999 
"2999 
"2999 
"2999 
"9999 


FORD 


CHEVY - GMC 


:‘^.®T99'9' 

'^9999 


''-■■|SS^ 999 i 

. >- , :'oa^rU.5^9999 

, '19999 













A_. 


BUICK - CADILLAC 
OLDSMOBILE 



THEY'RE 

OUTTA 

HERE! 


UH COLN - MERCURY 



PONTIAC 


SUBARU - MAZDA ■ TOYOTA I 
NISSAN ■ VW ■ CEO • SUZUKI 
HONDA ■ HYUNDAI ■ ISUZU 


laSSaiBABUJUgTY 

t34« 

iBBSTOYonmca 

wasi. 

1888 MAZDA 823 

jasfM ■ 

1987T0Y01ATB<Ca 

t157U_^_ - 

1888 BUZU tMPllSE 

f194U^ 

1888MSSANSBniU^ 

#28411 

1B81VWIU88ITC8NVL 

#304U___ 

1882 VW FOX 

f306U 

imGEOMHRO 

#327U 

1880 GEO STORM 

■341U 

1989 HOHIA ACCORD 

■ 


^ms)- 

ftitjgja 


1884 GEO KEIRQ. 


1891 HTUNOAIEXCa 


1883TDronUM)CHI8B) 

#A48a ■_ 

1887 HOtiDA ACCORD 


mm 

' ifii 




1882 suzun SWIFT 


m 




MANY MORE 
VEHICLES 
NOT LISTED 
HERE!!! 


Hp;f-2B04N4 



Unite subject to pnor sole. o.o.c. Sole price doei.not include fox, title ($8.00) and Dealer Doc Fee (SlSl'.OO). No Dealers Please! 




• NO CREDIT?— • BJtD CKCDIT? 

• NE1V TO AREA? • JUST CHANGED JOBS? 

• FIRST TIME BUYER? • BANKRUPTCY? 
•-VNABLETO-BUY^FROM-OTHERDEACERS? 

• TURNED DOWN BY OTHER LENDERS? 






1 tSd OwCARHliO^ 


’ll! 



, . lASlV TWIN FALLS 












E 10 Tlmes 44 ew 8 , Twin Falls, Idaho Friday, Decembor 1 , 2000 


TWIN FALLS. 2 txJrm 
4 *plox, WO hook up. 
Qppis. wotor pd.. siorago, 
5450 « dop. Col 324 - 7593 . 

733 - 5737 . No pels. 
TWIN FALLS. 2 tx 3 mi. 2 
bath 4 -plo* oaoss Irooi 
. . Pofiino Etomenlafy 
School. Cenirat air, gas 
hoot. Sowor, walor. 

. garbaoo paid, oil appis 
• md W/D. S 550 /mo* dop. 

1 mooin rent Iroo w/yoar 
loaso. No pots. PleoM 
' coll 737*3916 or 
735 - 1426 JI 


TWIN FALLS. 1 bdrm. opt. 
No pots. 

CaII733-5374,B 


yard, W /0 hookup. No 
pots. $450 * $ 225 .dop. 
Ploaso can 208 - 733 -« 42 .- 
TWIN FALLS. 4 bdrm. 2 
both. AC. now corpoi, 
w/fomily rm, 2 fireptoTOS, 
oppis.. gorago w/oponor, 
foncod yd., gos hoot, 
S 750 /mo.«dop. Crodit 
chock roq.CaH 734 - 6619 fl 


TWIN. FALLS. 3 bdrm. 2 I 
both In country. $500 I 


a etouitWdad 7330931, 

TWIN FALLS. AttrecUvt 2 
bdrm. 2 both, brick du- 


TWIN FALLS. Cloon 1 
bdrm. $ 2 eo«$t 50 dep. 
CSI Sonlor OlscouDL Coll 
734*5144 or 736 - 7607 . i 


TWIN FALLS. Duplex. 3 
bdrm. 2 both, loun^. ga- 

- raoo. 567 Std 0 p. 733 - 7876 . 
TWIN FALLS. Nsw: 3 

ixjrm. deluxo iownhouu 
with privotB yard & 
go/age, $ 760 . 00 . 733 - 

- 7445 bofora" 5.-00 pmJI - 
TWIN FALLS. SUPER 

DEALI 2 bdrm. 2 bath, in 
new 4 -plex, S 47 S/mo. No 
arrtpklngorpote. Coll 7 ^ 
B 4 S 2 or 7344522 « 


Him 




TV. nopota .1201 Kimbor- 
lyRd. 0 fcan 73 S 4 tt 32 :« 

f- 606 

^lLER. 3 bdrm., 2 balh,- 
$ 450 Ano + dop. 

Can 3265269. ■ 
FILER Very nice, quito, 

2 bdrm, w/ carport $ 30 (V- 
mo.No pots, rats 326-5887 



4.9% APR 

60MO. 3’,;^ 

TERMOAC y- 



mmwirM 

t 

2000 GMC SIERRA 4-DOOR 4VVD 


tvxuQoiii ond.Pbwerful v/. VSirteeVB . 
w/-AtifomoHc, A(n/Fin/Cos$«H©/Air, 
Power Windows, beb, 

WIdesIde Body ohd Much MorisI 
Sne 403193. MSRF;$2SXU6. 
m APR 60 ACNW TOM. CVkC EK4NCE 
Say^^CS <>iaAAJ® AT la Affi 72 A04TH 
TRM OAC PRICE AJTO FACTORY R£BAJE. 


* LOW > 
■' 7.9% APR 
60 MO. , . 
TERM OAC 



mw ^23,889 

CARTS DISCOUNT $3,147! 
fACWRTREBATE $1,000! 
FINANCE SAYINGS $7,183 ! 
SAVE AS men AS $11,330! 


. 2001 GMCJIAAAAY SLE 4X4 


roomy/styusH'>^P;3o:^ ■ . ' 

Vortec‘V 6 Power and Perfsrmdnce w/ 
Aulomotic, Power Wndow, locb. Mirrors, 
Air, Heovy*Doly Irailering Equipped ortd 
Much Morel 

St *13009. MSRR $30,344. 7.a Affi (» MONTH TBM.— I 
OAC fn>iANa SAVINGS CAiOXAIED AI 1 a APR 72 
MONIH TERM OAC PRICE AFTER FAaORY REBATE. 

now^ 26,744 

CARTS DISCOUNT $2,600! 
FACTORY REBATE $1,0001 ' 
O' FINANCE SAVINGS $5,591 ! 
iiAVEASMUCHAS ^,191! i 


2000 BUiCK CENTURY SPECIAL EDITION 


Bp-'BUY!^ -r •' 

cVdlFower jihd .EarfwTpan«b w/*Autom , . - 

Leather lnterwr;Arn/f^/Cds*seHe/CD, Power 
Windows, Lodes, Mlirors, Power Front 
Passenger ond Driver's Seals, Air ond AAorel 
St * 07016 . MSRft 525 , 900 . 5 . 9 % APR 60 MONTH 
TERM. FNANCES 4 MNGS CALCULATED All a AFR 72 
MONTH TERM OAC PWa AFTER FAOORY REBATE. 

now^ 20,500 

CARTS DISCOUNT $4,143! 
FACTORY REBATE $2,000! 

V O^ FINANCE SAVINGS $5,585 ! 
BUtcic- SAVEASMUCIIAS Sloi^! 


2001 PONTIAC GRAND A.M SE 


. , Lodded w/ Atifcntdlic/Ppvver Sunrdd 
- Arn/Fm/CD/Ccusefte, Power Windows,- 
Locks, Mirrors ,& Morei 
St #12044. MSRP; $2l,fl80.7.9X’A«’6bMdN^ 

OAC FlNAhO SOWINGS CAIOJIATED AT 1 a APR 72 
M(>riH TERM OAC PRICE AFTER FAaORY REBATE. 


NOWU 7,630 

CARTS DISCOUNT $3,500! 
FACTORY REBATE $750! 
. O' FINANCE SAVINGS $3,70’7 ! 
SAVEASMUaiAS $6,957! 

■'97;NlSSANSEmGXE«9558bj '00 CHEVY CA^ , , '98MERCEMS'320SPOfiT^» 

wow *1 1,777 \nOW J17,69TLL. 


'98MltilMSHIMONIHOSW(!r-.i»-| 

NOW n 7,987 


'00 FORD CREW CAB. «I 3 ! 38 .| 






FItESH-START 

CREDIT 

Hassle-Free 
Credit With 
Our 

Fresh-Start 

Program 

’ Bankrupkies 

* Collecllons 

* Slow Crodif 

* Repossessions 




% Shop Historic Downtown 
^ .Twin Falls Stores... 

» YOU COULD WIN A NEW ^ 

2001 TOYOTA , - 
COROUA! M 
iS?tts®ioiYOflb 


r 


.'■l/'l.iil ' ■ M Iv 

( /.I; i’. l ' ;/ • 



1995 PIT mON 

4 DOOl Atm loots, OMIK 




srHULZ»iioDai»un 

« 6,860 



rrTTir.v'i.Mj,- m.i itV.J 















E12 nm«#^«W8, Twin Fall#i Idaho Ffhlay.-December1.~2000 
















Friday, DMamljar 1 , 2000, Tlmm-ltowi, Twin Falla, Idaho E13 


>,^Ar 



H IS||aJ lij|B || I 


On Your Classifted Advertisementf 

3 unesSV^% ^ 
10 Days 1^ 

For items under or adding up to $1 000 (Maximum of 4 items) 

(SI each additional line. Private Party only. Some mtrictions apply. Merchandise only.) ^ 


iTheTiiiies-INews Call 733-093 1 Ext.2 


or 677-4042! 


®®*Tto«<ter.ok^^ E-MAlLyoufclas«tfiodad STROUEfl - baby, soau LABS d»wclaw«d will wanted- ow ri«r4,. 

SSS SrE-’" S“ 

* 

^ N*-«pl.c.....l ar5d.cn 73^657. oh».. SdS^M Chai&X ..My 

$tWo«ef **"■ Nortlake china. Sofvico WANTED to buy oldor SiuiOVEO • pufjptos AKC p^:don't pawn! Top (W- 

_: .73W920.- for 8 Dlia tarvioa DiowM J^*>8 8 Eaflla II w/book, small monuro aproodofs, log i«t «hA»« »««-,. I*h 733-3268, leavo tnso. 

Ask^ $200. CaU after 5 PJO or Qround drive, clawed, ready Ooc. 23. WANI^D; Vmugo Barbio 

■ . pme34-92I0.B CHAIN SAW Homellta 14 working or non-work no $3so i lamale SmniM dolls and cJothlnn loco 

ftjEWEUY&FURS ■ R^fl^^»-»>.54M0t1 ocvkktion. 324-5658. ^ 


cum NO BOARDS. 
MARBLE « GRANTTE. 
Ask for Jarrod botwoon 8 


**[SC|LLANE0U3 Star- 1- WATERBEO frame w/piUow I scHMatOTg . mm 


Mid. H-11, appraised al Pine AM. addillonal 


NORDIC TRACK- Seqtxjia 
model. Performance track 
’feed out speed distance 
ymer. $178. 543-6009. 

1 817 n 

JWSCFORSA^ 

)i|RTIFICIAL Chrfatmea 
Vm. Mnt Kng; 7W, used 


~^FAX 

YOUR 

AD 

TIMES CLASSIFIED 
DEPARTMEirr 
208 - 73^5538 

208 - 677-4543 

(BURLEY) 


ling Silverware. 7 place lop/ offer. New carpet $6 blackMiiwM i m«u\rvi n 733-1322 or 733-06880 
per yrd. 326-4098. female, great diapoal- Wt BUY live tree*. W 
Si. WHEELCHAIR Invacare 'wa.7wfcsold.73S-1325, ce. crab. pine, aspen & 

Co^324-5^ ' " Acirve.lighl weight w/ itiv Pooni w . a ^ _gO»eis Ig/smafl 788.2676. 

-■ ^eumaiic wheels. DIM , wtwe female. $2<»/ offer WOULD LIKE TO BUY 

■INO PONO foble; OevU upright VKuum 6 yr old male. «vhite Toy ^ PEPPER coflec- 

Kldatable4 2cfialrB$20, cleaner, bag o( women'e Poodle. $l50/olfor Call *»n and Old prims or old 


PINO PONG table; $50. 


Oak desk, $50. 734-2383. 

REMEMBER 
That birthday ad you placed 
some timo ago In TTw 
Tunos-News? Now b the 


elothlng plus alio, good 


IMUSICALMSTRUUEKTSI 


tcn watrTi!o - »A.~ . tales and collections. Coll Block & boauiilul. SS995 

Wackbil^lS^ a 733-1322 or 733-0688 J Call 837-9174 or 590-2272 ' 

female, greet diapoal- BUY live tree*. Spni^ HONDA CR-SOO 95 
liota.7wfcsold.73S-1325. ce. crab. pine, aspen & $2500. Excel shape. 

W POOOLF . 4 /Mrt otheiY I g/sman 788-2676. 662-3375 or B62-3429 

wtwe female. $200/ offer. WOULD LIKE TO BUY K A WA S AK I - 1 99 6 
6 yr old male, tvhite Toy “ PEPPER coflec- KLX300. 4 stroke, waior 

Poodle. $150/olfer. Call Old prims or old cooled, runs oreol 

934-5003. frames. 436^791 S2800/oHor. Call fio<v1,r^n 

Toy poodles- purebred d f.„ I 934-5951 orS39-9998 
puppies. 2 males: twh.ro SUZUKI '94 DS-80 Exc 

1 epricoL tail docked. 1st coodtiion. $l20Q/offer 

shots and hoirculs. $150 Call 432-6010 

each. Call 934-5003. 


627 

GARAGE SALPft 


7£ri^Sy“?r' 

SSr” 


uw. rnucuo KMoer wracc- * 

ea.. $225. Exerebar ma- clJony polished. Boby 

Chine. $35. Mbc. camping RX J -le'. 

equip. Call 4230925. Coll 72&-22M 


1 822 

TOOLfi/UACHtIJPOV GtOurxJs ' extras. S3200/FIRM. Call 

Oec.2r>d&3m verxler* 934-5895 ask for Travis 
CRAFTSMAN largo tool . wanted. YAMAHA. 1965, YZ 250. 

boxes. $275 & Craftsman . uatbeMng co«ita for kldt. Completely redone, loo 
(oob. 73&8390 alter 5om 532-4439. Fro lodmisscn many extras to lisl. Exc. 
SNOWBLOWER MTO. to JEROME - 412 )6m Avo s>]apa. SlOOO/olfor. Call 
HP/M electric atari, used E.. Sat. & Sun. 8-4pm 324-1217 or 731-61 19, 

2 hooft. $400. 732-8180. MOVING SALEt Comer i ..... i 

^ = huteti, walnut/morblo dry I 

■ 825 aink. $500 oa. Misc rati- I BOATS & 

■ WANTED TO BUY Ing/camp.ng gear. Dry- I ' ACCESSORIES 
i suit. $50. Lovesoat & ot- 


INDOOR Flier Flee Market J*MA«A^99 vz.125 
n, T,», F.«s CjFFh F.., 


extra vacauort Medicare now pays for your 


;mon^ Why nal *el thoae 
. eaigood Rems youve been 
■MonnciT CUsafled wd do K. 
:cal 7330631. 


PIANO 

Kimball Spmot. $1000. 
Call 324-5598. 


Marker M27. polos- Scott 

C^-S£m.77M signature 48-. boots Nor- PIANO - Lowry apmot 

*****t^w^w^w dice TC-4, ebo 8t4. $280 Pecan. $800/ off. 
wwwwww********* ca04234043 - Call 934-5587 


s^fews 


a. t 4. e e P i 


Pecan. $800/ offer. 

• Call 934-5S87 
USED Grand Oigiiai Con- 
60(0. Spinel & Old Uprf^ 


YAMAHA. 1965, YZ 250, 
Completely redone, loo 


324-t2l7or 731-6119. 
903 

BOATS & 
ACCESSORIES 


PlanA* /*«il T^i Bi 1C a - i »«'*• l-OVBSOOl S 01- 

r34-BH5.» Centaur acouelJc PA toman & more, BOAT, porteet duek hum; 

Brand now. nov- TwIn FALlsT mg bool, 14’ Mirrocrali 

t Day Onlyll All stylos. Pt- or used. 1 loo many. Goes urtuiun cai e - cam©. Boat. 25 hp elec 

onos from $795. Call 206- fdr$^.99. sell for $450. ,5^7 Stan meter, very inilo 

8CI-6921.1 <^n73$-0Ci68asklerJim. ’^;_IOornle2pm.2450 used smeo new. cushion- 

gOLiECT6R<HigTORfAN come, scats, anchor pigs 

wwn llama. medals. garden lornituro. loe KAWASAKI. (2) stand-up 

daogera. awi^s. flags. many itesm to mention !•* extras, 

876-3114 hero. SO... snow-er Sun 'StOOO / fer bom or oiler, 

Fixer upper house m Twin -...losteomo. C a ij 3 2 4 • i 2 i 7 o r 

Twn falls Sat. tCMom. 


• Ple^ print clearly with dark pencil or pen 

• Approximately 23 spaces including blank 
spaces. 

• We will notify you if there is a special going 
on which might result in a discounted price 

» 3 line, minimum ' Private Party Only 


8-15 days $42.00 

16-30 days $78.50 

(Includes Magic ValuesrAg'Weekly and Internet) 


X8 too Wsshbum 
gurtar, Ike new. lock down 
straps. $200. 

Celt 733 4019. 

f 820 “1 

^etsAsuppue^ 

CHThuAHUA- AKC pup- 
ples . $325. firm cash 
only. 1st shots. 432.5439. 

CHINESE PUG • female, 
not fixed, $200. Call 
7364S06.M 

DOG RUN lO'xtO'xe'. 

6 mos old. Now $239. will 
sou tor $150. 734-0275 

FOUND Male Block 


garden furniture, loe KAWASAKI. (2) stand-up 
many itesm to mention many extras, 

hero. SO... snow-er Sun -SlOOO / fer bom or oiler, 


tWlNFALLS4ot.ig.4pm. 
wh. 423-5670 after 6pm. I Lots of pre-scheel ago 


HUNTING HOUNDS. 
Blood. Welkers. Bluo 
ticks. 438-3068 or 
•436-8257 


toys & OQuipmom.. 

148 Avenide Del Rio 
(Washington & PeleUno) 
Under car pen. 


1 904 

CAMPERSr.HELLS 


WANTED. SCI ol cable 
camper jacks 
• Call 788-4568 ‘ 

. -WKTEHN WILDERNESS 
'89. Alpine 10' HyOraulic 
lacks, soll-coniained. now 
baitory. 208-878-1811 
Of 670-3933 

4 905 

I GUNS/RIFLES 

COLT Afl Ts! now m box, 

. never shot, pro-assauli 
ban. $2000. 543-4368 ■ 
GUN CABINET Solid oak. 
holds 8 guns Storoge on 
boilom. Great Christmas 
gift. Make ofler 734-4866 
REMINGTON. 300 Wjn- 
chesier mag w/woria 
class scope & sling, S300 
734-6463 ‘ 

SAVAGE 440, 12 gauge 
over & under. $4S0.or 
Irodc lor - 20 gauge over 
& under. Call U7-6147 
WINCHESTER Collectors 
Med. 25. 12 go., Si7S 
.Mod. 1894, 30WCF, Oc- 
lagon barrel.-S22S-MoO“ 
62 WRF. .22 Octagon 
barrel, $225. B25-S4S9 

4 906 I 

I HOT TUBS/POOLS 

SPAS & POOLS 
Prov>eu5iy owned 
734-0103 

Snake River Pool & Spa 
SUNDANCE 8 person 
$3000 Call 324-7697 

4 907 I 

I MOTOR HOMES &RVS 

RED DALB,~22lt„ 1978. 
460 Class C Wollmflinia- 
mod Heady lor read 
$7,500,.CalI.423:8768J. 
VANTYPE..1991,21ft.mo- 
terheme, soil contained. 
AC, microwave, AT, Ford 
chassis, very good. 
$9,000. Tmdc/soil. 

Call 734-2393a 


•436-8257 Under car pen TETON Traveler, Ms OKJor 

M^r7%20 Imedicalsuppues 

WHbtLCMAIR. RbscoL USED CAMPER SMELLS 
I'ko h»w. moionicd with Quainyicondilion, Many 

®" occossorlos. $2000. $i208/modols, Siarimg 

^ Z03-324-6124. $100. 678-0103 


I ‘SNOW VEHICLES 
& EQUIPMENT 

Creel Sledsf Great Prices^ 
• tPS37-t. 1999 Polans 
700 Rmk:.S 5.999“ — :.:r 
Gary's Freeway RV 
7336756 or 1:«XKg3-22t9 


Great Sledal Great Prfeeal 
• 8PS49-3. 1994 Polans 
440. $2,295 

Gary's Freeway RV 

7336756 or 1-6003332219 
^CnC CAT '95 & ‘96 
580 EXT Hand 6 thumb 
warmers w/covors.Long 
track. Low mis. Nice 
machines. $2750 {'95| 
S2350 r96). 324-2154 
^CnC CAT ‘90 500 Pow. 

dcf Special. Zero mllee. 
Arctic Cet ■97680 EXT EFI 
Zero milts. 366-2689 or 

• 366-7989 

~ARCnC CAT ZR700. “ 
1999. long track & pipes. 
$5,000. Call 
206-e62-9266JI 
^CTICCAT. 1994, 
ZR580. tong track. 2* pad- 
dle w/2 place till ndc oil 
Ifir. $3500. Call 731-4681 
ARCTIC CATS. (4) '91-'94 
Lowmi.oxc. cond. Ready 
10 go Make offer! SeeC 
433 W. Addison. T P. ■ 
_E^AIL your cfassiliod ad 
10 us at 

twiruidOmIcron.rwl 
POLARIS '00 RMK-600 
Long paddle track. Like 
now. $4800.733-1735 
POLARIS 96 XCR 600. 
743 Ml, Lite GT33Cnroiler 
: & helmets. Musi soH 
$5500.436-9057,6731773 
POLARIS 800(2) '94. 
$3,000 each/ofiot. ‘97 
Yamehs PW 50. Used 
very Irnle. $750. 324-0034 
POLARIS. 1996 Ullro, 
piped, has 2* track. 136. 
3000 mi. 1st $2000 takes 
It' 733-.2287or736-t788a 
POLARIS. 1996. Ultra 

... RMK. 613niil03.liha.new. 

$3300. POLARIS 1989, 
650. clean sled. $1700. 
637-6567 or 539-22 19 ■ 
SKl-DOO 

(2) '96 Summit 670 X. 

Call to see 423-9007. 
SKFDOO ‘94 Summit 583 
Exe. cond. w/vory low mis 
$2SOO/effor. 543-407411 
No manei now you tpeno youi ' 

• a.iys. ciAitiiiea ins youi 
ousy BChedulo Pul ciassi' 

. fiihr&~lane-sriv>ns dieciery 
ol goods and sonneas lo 
wQik lot you lod.^r 



Print Ad Copy in Spaces Below 

(Allow 1 space firr each letter, puncuutiun m-uluanJ hl.ink .'p.itw.) 


4> Addilloiul lines extra charges 4> 


FREE kitten lo good home. 
Femalo. 4 months old. 
Coll 543-8427 


Run my ad in classification » for Jays. 

Amount Enclosed $ 

Or charge my ad to: 

□ Visa □ Mastercard □ American Express □ Discover 

Credit Card Number • 

Expiration Date 


■ Address 

' Cfty/Stace/Zip 

■ Phone Number' 


^Sie^Punes-News 


FREE to a good hontc 
Lab/Chesepoeke X 
Puppies. 9 wks. 324-5659 
FREE- 3 mo. old fomofo 
puppy. Call 734-2472 
FREE- Black Lob/Chow X. 
malo, obedient and good 
noturod. 326-4814. 
GOATS - PYGMY. 9 wk 
Old. twins, $25 oach or 
$40/pair. (1) 3 year old 
Nanny $25. Toko oU 3 lor 
$60. 423-6120. ■ 
GOLDEN RETRIEVER 
AKC puppies. Ready 12/6 
but will. hold for Santa. 1st 
shots, dew daws remov- 
ed. Two lifters and lots of 
colors lo chooso from. 
Soo oil parents, exc. fam- 
. Ilydogsorhunting 
Lcomp8nloa,S2ZS-CalL 
436-5627 or 431-7223 
! GOLDEN RETRIEVERS 
AKC 1st shots, wormed, 
dowdaws. 543-8371 
GOLDEN RETRIEVERS. 
pups.-AKC, 2 melo.'beeu- 
tilul It. goldon. shots, dew-- 
daws $225. 837-4 13Sa 
GOLDEN RETRIEVERS. 
Ready lor Christmas. 
AKC. S27Sea.733-8156M 
JACK RUSSELL TERRI- 
ER jiupplos, like wish- 
bone. fust In time lor 
Christmas, $300 oo. 
Please can 200-7334M51 . 
LAB PUPPIES AKC Reg. 

3 Momihs. 2nd shots, 
dowdaws, 2 black fe- 
males -S2S0. each, i 
chocolate male- $300 
Oircn. PBrUTUs avallebto ( 
for vtowing. 438-2620 I 


208-4834023. NampiM 


WANTED - Looking lor 
Hommond B3. C3 or At 00 
- -orgonrPlooso'contncr 
543-2946. 

WANTED 16’ aluminum 
bool w/ troller. With or 
without motor. 544-2662 
WANTED 1987 Oodgo 
pick up for pons. 

• Com 324-2450 
WANTE04 wheolor. 2S0cc 
or bigger. Up to StOOO. 
Consider a robulldablo 
unll. Can 431 -9573 
WANTED TO BUY. non 
woiklr>g gerwrotors. 
Wokfor generator sots. 
Ditch pumps. 324-7426. 
WANTED TO BUY. ^t to 
reel tope recorder. Porta- 
bio. good working order, 
moxpenslve. 326-4156. ’ 
WANTED TO BUY. 
vacuum cloattor In good 
condrtion. CaM 733-7814. 
WANTED TO BUY- A resi- 
dential sized porlablo 
electric generator, noor 
naw . 120 volt 30 nmn 
~709o watt. Prosbyierian 
Church. 733-7023. 
WANTEO TO BUY. Oldor 
Fender guitar ampllflera. 
Any cond. 326-3623 
S39-S876. 

WANTED TO BUY; Buitd- 
btg molofiats. 2X6. moial 
Biding, plywoo'i. porlido 
board, chain link fence. 
Pleose can 206-733-9658. 
WANTED TO BUY: Molal 
lathe In good condition, 
medium lo smell size. 
Ptoase caM 206-738-4549. 
WANTED Used treadmill 
and eialkmary bike. T<^ 
quolthr. In good condition. 
CaU733-3634 
WANTED Wire feed weld- 
or. Ig. no volL or email 
220 volL Must bo In good 
cond. Hobori or Mlllor > 
preferred, cm 677-2693 



A-COUS-Tl-CAL 
i & DRYWALL 

Bob's BesTDrywall 
Best Duality - Best Ratos 
Cuslom Textures 
731-0788 (TF) 
67&4W91 (Buitoy) 
insured - Free EsUmetes 

AIR DUCT 
CLEANING 

Air Quality Services 

•Air Ducts •Furnocos 
•Dryer Vents •Chimneys 
•Insulation Romoval 
733-8m V 800827-9181 

BUSINESS 

SERVICES 

TWIN FALLS 
PLAN ROOM 
Jobs to bid lor Generals, 

ors. Blueprint copies. 
734-PLAN (7526). 

carpentryT 

ETC. 

Retired licensed General 
Contractor w/ovor 25 yrs, 
oxpor. Enjoys carponiry 
work Call 7354)615 

CLEANING 

SERVICE 

COUNTRY CLEANERS 
Buslnossos. rosJdomial, & 
construction clean up. - 
Spociallzo In carpet 
I Waning. Freo osllmatos. 

I Bonded & Insured. 

I Jerome 324-3299 ' 

COMPUTER * 
SALES/SERVICE ^ 

♦HPJBM-Compeq-Daft* 
.Computers. Notebooks, 
-;Prtntots.-FaxMachlnos.- " 
— Wo Sea & Service All ( 
OFFICE ID •736-8666 
Vlstt OUT retail etore 
iocatad by Office Max. 


ENGINEERING & 
DRAFTING 
SERVICES 

Spocializmg in ongineonng 
andior draltmg sar\'!COs 
for ros>doncoar\a civil 
onglnoonng proioct:i 
Coll Pat at 326-i0c'B 

HEATING & AIR 
CONDITIONIN G 

SAWTOOTH SHEET 
METAL 

Hoaling/AC Rolngorolion 
Commercial and rosidcniinl 
(208) 733-8548 ' ' . 

HOME 

HEALTH 

I Idaho Home Health and 
— Hoepice . -Ir K. p rovid es. 
Medicare and Medicaid 
Coriitied. JCAHO Accred- 
Hod Services Gcr^oral. 
Conalnc, Pediainc and 
Cardiac Nursv>g: PrrvRosl- 
Opqrntivo Therapy, 

“ "Pfe/Posl-Nntni Norsmg, 
Podiainc Services. 
Nuirttionni Therapy. 
Personal Caro, iv 
Therapy, Med'cal Social 
Sorvicos, Psychioinc 
Nursing, Physical 
Thoropy, Speech Therapy, 
Occupalional Therapy 
Located at; 200 2nd 
Ave. N. In Twin Falls 
WItti BranchoM In But]l. 
Halloy, Rupert and In 
EMfem Idaho. 

For more Informotlon. 
call 1-800-540-4061. 

HOME 

CONSTRUCTION 


HOME REPAIRS 

BENEREL’S HOME CARE 

Remodels, drywall, iilo. 
painting 6 carpentry. 20 
•yrs oxp. Free Esiimaios 
Coll Bruce 733-7543 

HOME REPAIRS 

TONY'S HOME REPAIRS 
& Landscaping 
•Drywall Rcpairs’Fouccts 
•“ainiing •Remodels, oic. 
•iVe do ivri.if you enn'r 
Topy-734-3322 

lImousine 

SERVICE 

LIMO 4 U I 

Hourly. duiivA Special 
packages, .ij-'kpoi bun 
Valley. Call lur 'me.''- 
539-LIMO (54601 
JTlwn od b y La rry . Ko ni . -i rKt-i- 
Cindy Collins I 


Need gravel 01 din 
Call for moro mlo .ind 
pneos. 432-55IC 


An Jobs Large & Small 
Interior & Exterior 
732-5618 or 731-6089 1 


Ryall Palming & 
Resioratlon. Get Your 
Holiday Interior Touchup 
Needs Done Today' 
Also Low Temp. Exionor 
Pointing Call For Free 
Esiimnics. Al 7354)584 

pa1nting& 

REMODELING 

Thompson's 
Painting & Remodeling 
Quniily Hxpononcod Work 
No Job Too Small 
■ Free Estimaioi 
(2U) 934-5343 

PAINflN(3 & 
WALLPAPERING 

LUPKER PAINTING. INC. 
■Paiming,'Remooanr)g7Tox;; 
tuhng & Wallpapoiiiig. 
Free osiimatosl 
Call an O (208) 324-3475 
or (208) 727-1267 coll. 


PROFESSIONAL 
ROOnNG A COATINGS 
733-7221 or 326-5857 
Commorcial. rosueiuial. 
Buildup roofi Stc'-i minor 
leaks repaired m P4 tus , 

ROOFING! 

Reasonable rales! . 

Freo oslirhotos Imnncmg 

737-0000 

HOME BUILDING- 

Plena Available 

Froo csiimoios 

737-0000 
“SHARPENING ’ 
SERVICE 

JOHN'S SHARPENING 
SERVICE 

Complehr sharpening 
Carbide & ctt-ei saws 
141 Ui.ickcn St S 
734-4050 • 1-800-471-4050 

TREESERViCES 

TREES-RUS 
Serving Mini-Cassia & MV 
•Total Tree Care ‘Stump 
Removal • Total Landscap- 
ing • Firewood sold by 
the cord spilt A 
delivered • Froo Estimate 
431-5391 • 678-4182 evos 

TREE TRIMMING ' 

CECIL'S TBEE TRIMMING 
• Topping A removal. 

. • ^ump removal. 
‘YrooEstIrfiaies’ 
Call7S34»8S 


KAjUttM-TnovTurtg 

& Lawn care. Shrubbery 
and bt^h trimming. 
For Irao Eslrmalos 
CaR73$-0553 



E14 Tim#i*Newf, Twin Fdlli, Idaho Friday, Dacambar 1, 2000 



. ' -J.im j 
' SNOWMOBILE 00 Skl- 
doo 700 Hlghmofk.eOO 
mi./warroniy. Skid pinto. 
SCOOO. Call 431-0316 
iiNUWMOBILE 98 Poloris 
■ Indy SOO. Exc. cond. Win- 
, lof tuno-up. roQdy lo fldo. 

- 2l00mi.Call532-4790of 
431-5021 

WELLS CARGO - 1993 2 
place enclosed drive- 
m/diivo-oul. S2750. Call 
734-1485JI 

ZH 700 '99 2‘ long. track. 
Pori Spolishod; piped.' 
roods, power jots. Low 
miles. S4800. 

M/10 suspension 121‘- 
136'SIOOO. 

. Now I2r track r deep. 
Stop. Caii67B-38 09 

909 I 

SPORTING GOODS 
HUNTING SUPPUES 

Excellent Family Chnslmos 
pilt: Jerome Country 
Club membership, days 
736-1275 eves 733-302341 


ADIL LAC_-B9_C ou p»_^ 
door, hardtop. Rune 
good, brakes good, drives 
homo,. SSOOO- 352-4211 
evos. 034-9340 days.B 
CHEVY ’67 Short wheel 
base pickup. Ready to 
run, 0 lol ol extras. Coll 
078-3904 leave message. 
CHEVY-1967 Nova SS.' 
easily restored. S3000. 
Call 886-2B60.B 
CHEVY Impala, SS. 1965. 
327. Exc. cond. 55000/ 
oiler. Coll 732-0361. ■ 
FORD 1963 PU. newer 
white palm. S3000/olfor. 

Call 732-S479.B 

FORD Muslong Coupe. 
1971 . 351 Cleveland. 
Runs groal. Will go quick. 
S3000/oflor. Coll 732- 
8246 or 733-1886.B 


CHEVY -82 Short box 4x4, 
runs good. 3* lift. 53200. 
Call 420-3260H 
CHEVY '93 Suburban, 
loaded, runs groal, 
$12,500. 734-8182 (msg). 
^EVY "95 1 ton rog cab. 
4x4 6.5 diesel. AT. excel 
cond. 105 k. S9900./ollQf. 
678-5746 


• SPORTIZED WW II M-1 
Winchesier 30-06. 5500. 
lirm 677-8 119 

910 

travel TRAILERS 

ALJO Arles. 1990, 29' 
travel irir., (uily soli con- 
lainod, sloops 6. exc. 
cond , 57500. Coll 
200-655-4334 ■ 
~DEV1LLE 1211, Goo'd — 
condilion, 5700 

; ' Call 543-4003, 

; -HITCHHIKER -BO'sTh 
. wM(m.'I27Ii. Exc. cond. 

; Uon(iod’!Call733-6l30.B 
- OFF SEASON CLOSEOUT 
; -New Road Ranger 27 ft, 
5iii wiicc'l. exc. lioor plan, 
mar knciicn, loaded, low- 
e3^prlcos oHhe years. 
No\vS18,900. KilOualily 
- Local Service. 
Srockmon's RU.-324-4203 
Of t-BDO-773-3167. 
SIERRA OY COBRA, '91 
ATTENTION SNOW- 
BIRDS! 26', microwave, ■ 
lully Bell-coni„-awmng, 
Like new' Call 733-1468. 

911 I 
UTILITY TRAILERS 

OOiJCARTTRAlLER" ” 

. 5350.733-8465 

UTiUTY TRAlLER '90 

Hniinaik, cnclesod,6x10' 
ramp back, Exlrahigh, I 
New tires. Sl800/olfer. 

Call 734-027S • I 


1 1006 • 
SEMI & HEAVY 
EQUIPMENT 

ALLOY.- 1983, 42 H. dal- 
bod trailer; Now deck, 
good ilros. S4500/allor 
326-4141 or 539-4140. 


CAT 12 GRADER, model 
8T w/hydraulic side shili 
blade. Call 731-469t.l 
IHC. 1970, 1700. Loadsior, 
14 It. manure truck. Ro- 
I built 34S w/winch. Me- 
chanically sound. 53500. 
536-6135, shop or 536- 
1667, homo or 536-2321, 
JO 3IOD. '96. 4X4. Cab 
w/heai. 0x1. 2400 hrs, 2 
buckets, exc. cond. 
535.500. Call 539-S839.R 
KENWORTH-Class ol 
1996 W900L, Super 10- 
.spd., SOO hp Nt4 Cumm- 
ins. 2 yr warranty. Exc. 
shape. Call 536-5023. ■ 
KW-1991T600, Senes 60 
Detroit. 9 spd irans, 
OS402 roar end. 4:33 ra- 
lio, 60* sleeper. 11:24,5 
rubber, 5tS.OOO or oiler. 
2- 1992 KW T600 Senes 
60 Ootron. 9 spd irons.. 
OS4D2 rear end, 4:t1 ra- 
tio, 42* slooptOf,'tl:24,5 
rubber. 515.000 each or 
olfor. Call S37-6787 or 
S43-4019.Noad 
seiiciiation. 

TROJAN • 1994 2 yrd, 
3000 hours. 527,500. 
1994 JO 744 E. log forks 
and 5 yrd, 584,500. f997' 
Clemons. 3 axle belly 
dump. 40'. 522.500. 208- 
237-0966 602-524-5401. i 


- CHEVY - 1990 ^4 ion exi. 
y cab. short box. loss Ihan 
1.000 miles on romanu- 
_ laclurod engine, now Idler 
f ■ and pitman arms and Ironl 
1. shocks, robuili air condl- 

lionor. 12,000 lb. winch. 2 
battarios, Gtastito shall. 
Call 208-837-6353.M 
CHEVY • 68 Suburban 4x4, ^ 
6.2. now Irans. good tiros. ‘ 
siraight. 54000. 324-1233. 
CHEVY Blusr S10. 1991. 

4 dr.. 4.3 V6. loaded. 
55700. 1994 CMC 2-71 
extended cab, high miles, 
512.500, 536-S777.M 
CHEVY Sllvarado. 1996. 
omorafd/silvor, clean. 
514.800. call 423-S327.M 
CHEVY. -08. Stunning 
cond. Tons ot.classy 
chromo. 6 disc CO. PW. 
PL,' cruise', AC. Auto. 
56500. Please call Doug 
O 208-678-2845. ■ 

CHEVY, '92, Silverado. X-- 
Cab, short bod. loaded' 
350 siandard trans.. 103 
K mi., exc. cond., 58995 
Call 734-4665.B 
CHEVY. 1500. 1989. 4 
wheel dr. 350. AT. cruise, 
till. PW, PL. loaded' 
55700/olfor. Call 934- 
8220 or 670-24 47.B 
^HEVY, 1997, W ion. 4X4. 
.Silverado package, oxe 
cond. 514,000. S43-4309, ' 
CHEVY. 96 ext cab 4x4, 
6-cyl. AT. AC. 1 1 .000 
miles 518,988. Call 
1-800-743-9502. OIr ; 
~OODGE '95 2500 d<C$0l. 

AT. AC, Loaded' 

135K miles. 512.500. 
837-4147 01 539-7290* 
DODGE >xT.. 1966.4x4. J 
good condition. 53.000. . 
Call 543-6023, ■ 

^HO '92 Explorer XLT 
Low mis. Exc cond 59500. 

Call 733-7115 _ 

FORD '93 3/4 ton. Now iiai 
bod, AC. CC. tilt, lapo 
dock, custom wheels. 
54000 Call 532-2365 ' 


?• FORD. F-350, 1999. 1 ton' 
6 spd. Power stroke dlo- 
_ eel, exc shape. 732-8376. 
'• i^RD, Ranger. 1992, ext. 

cab, 5 speed. 4 wheel 
)• drive, Cleon, CO. 55,200 
r Cali 208-837-6523,B 
FORD- F150. 1992 snort 
I- wheel base, llsro side. 

302 eng., AT w/overdrtve. 
' AC, PD, cruise, tUt, auto 

-I hubs, rocof«or hitch. 7 

way RV plug. AM/FMcos- 
r aotto, bench seal with arm 

I teste & power lumbar. 

tires e0'!b,71K miles. 

• Flashy color. 59500. 

Call 324-8255a 
FORD- 1993 F2SO. oxc. 
condilion. 5$pd. loaded, 
diamond ploied tool box. 
Call 543-4279. 

SuburtMin. '93. ctolh. 
AC. hoot front & roar. PW. 
PL. 512.500/oltor. Call 
280-0934 or 73 4-964QB 
CMC. 1972. 1500 Custom 
p/u, 350 V8, AT. Clean. 
S35QQ. Call 934-8280.B 
CMC. 1988. 3S004ar..PW 
windows, siaorlng, 
brakoo, 454 engine. 
SS950/otfer. 733-0445 
leave msg. or 28Q-Q61S.B 
INTERNATIONAL ‘75 
Scout II. now 4* lilt, 33* 
tiros, new Interior 5 lots 
mofo. 32 4-4284/539-6460 
isuzu, Trooper. '94. oxc. 

cond. 58,900. Call ' ' 
423-6348 or420-59SO.B 
JEEP '96 Grand Chorokoo •; 
oxc. cond. 40K mis. Now 
tiros. V-6. tow pkg. 
517,400. Call 326-2205 . 

JEEP - '96 Chorokoo 4x4, * 
very cloan.l ownor.90K 
mis. 515,000. 768-30S6.B - 
JEEP Chorokoo. '85. 1l7k* * 
mi. now tiros, runs good. 
Needs TLC. SI500. Call 
324-3385 • 


RD Taurua-LX-Wa 
'89; loaded. CD stereoi 
AT, less than 600 ml. on 
rebuin 3.6 engine. S3.000. 
larvan “»7618 or96MB38J 
80. AT, good FORD, Escort, OT. 1986. 
52.600. 324-3232JI S700 or best offer. Please 
drand Voy- 208*829-5366. msg.B 
-ford- 92. Crown Victoria 
53.500. Call7^71S9ii I lull powor, 24mpg. nice 
cond. $2900. 867-19l0a 
3MNDAM.'92,n>d.4dr.', 
PS. PB . AT, cruise, 33 
m.p.g., show room cond. 
Inside & outside. $3,495. 
Cell644-1423.a 


JEEP Grand Wagoner; 
1966. fully loaded. Grand- 
pas cofi Need cosh 
ASAP. Groat dealt 54000 
732-8246 or 733-tee6.« 

JEEP Wrangler. 1999. Sett 
lop. 4x4: snow tires. 3tk 
rmtes. Has had regular oil 
Changes. Groat cond. 
513,000. Call Oobby O 
2O0-768-7O94, ■ 


1 1001 
, AVIATION 

"FLIGHT INSTRUCTIoTT 
RAJ Aviation LLC 
alJoromo County Airport 
Call Jim 539-4 486 

looT 

AUTO PARTS & 

• ACCESSORIES- 


CHEVY. 87. HO !5ion. 350 
luolinjociion. AC, HO-AT. 
Irans. cooler. P8. PS. low 
pkg.. new roar tiros, 
loppor. 53500. Call 733- 
O4S9altoM0am,M 
DODGE '65 5300. 

Call 324-3522 
DODGE 1500. 1997.8-Cvl.. 
canopy. CO. 37k mi., lull 
power, 511,500, 732-5951. 
_DOOGE, Rarr? 60.J98S-. 

$950 or best olfor. Ask tor 
' Mac 206-733-7340, 
FORD. 7982, 1 ton. Iiai- 
bod, dual whoeis. stake 
rails, good cond. $2500. 
Please call 208-^3-4309. 
FORD, F-150. 1900. long 
wheel base, 4 spd. 6 cyl. 
Runs good. $1100. Call 
—734-2e08onoo-a roes' 
Momingsldo Or.B 
FORD, F-250. 1990, 460 
cubic Inch engine, AT. 
AC. good cond. $4000. 
Please call 208-543-4309 


; FOfl0'93,Ft50,6-cyl.S0k 
“mi.'Muslsoo' 510,500/ 

; otior. 734-8 n 8. ■ 

^RD ■_1976 (on. 4x4, 
AT. now engine & uros. 
53800. Call 734-9466B 
F^O • 1995 F350 Crow 
cab XLT. 460, AT. PW, 
PL. keyless entry. AM/FM 
. eassene. CO Changer. 4* 
suspension htt.. Rancho 
shocks and tracii'on bars. 

. .brush guard, nort step 
bars. 35x12.5x16.5 tiros. 
Nico truck in exc. cond.. 
Coll 734-4757. 

FORD . 2001 P1S0 XLT; 
ext. cob, loss than 2400 
mis. S26.000/ollor. 

Call 543-4368, ■ 

FORD 10937'F250, 4x 4. 
_8upof cab, XLT. turbo 
OiO3orS7SQ0r934-52 44B'~ ' 
FORD Bronco, 1996, XLT. 
Groal cond.. 43k miles. 
Leather. CO. running 
boards, while. Asking 
I 516.500.208-788-2635. 


JEEP. Grand Chorokoo 
SE. 1998. Ve. sunroof, 
tow pkg. Everything but 
leather; deep amo- 
ihyst/gray. 34K miles. 
523,600. Call 324-4124.M 
JEEP. Wrongtof. '95. rod 
w/oiack hardiep-sontop. 
S3K.St0.995.735-8647.B 
NISSAN 2000 Ffoniier. 
crowcab. Must Sollll 
Coll 678-4933 ■ 
SENTRA, B2. AM/FM tape 
deck. FWO. 5 spd.. oxc. 
cond. AC, 54000/offOf- 
280-0934 or 734-9640 ■ 

TOYgTA - 1907 4x4. Oxt. 
cab. 4 cylinder, 5 spd. 

. CO. Smitty, Built accesso- 
ries. runs groat. S4500/o- 
tier. Coll Gooding 934- 

595torS39-099e» 

TOYOTA^ 1990 4x4. mini 
condition, 40K miles. Coll I 
733-0 385 . ' 

— ^1010 n 

VAN a BUSES 

CHEVY Astro, 1997, all 
wheel drive. Cruise, tilt, 
air, PW windows, exc, 
cond., 514,000-734-9323 


_ AUDI '03 Quaitro CS 4X4 
Loododll Hoatid soats, 
I. loalhor, CD&MORE. 
Croat snow car. 512,250. 

764-2345 Or 764-2324.B 
■ AUTOMATIC 
TRANSMISSIONS 
I Special $359.95. Most 
American vehictos.-pans, 

* labor & Installation 

inefudod. 

Economy Transmission 
. CsH32*S760tor 

•sif/nsMs. ■ 

BUICK REGAL 78. tabuill 
ongino & imns, nice paint 
SfflOO. 670-3817 
BUICK. Riviera ‘97, super 
charged, leather, hooted 
seats, coss. 5 CO ptoyor. 
only 28K miles, oxc. cond 
517.000. 734-5623 B 
Cadillac ‘85 Sedan Oowile. 
Exc. cond. 2 sols newer 
- 11103.51800.678-3854 
CAOILLAC-'Ol.jMuio. Oxc. 
cond.. bluo leather imori- 
or. S6.SQQ. Coll 324-2444. 
CHEVY celebrity. ‘86. 4- 
dr.. AT. PB. AC. iM mSos 
51450. Call 736-6738. 
CHEVY, 97 Cavalier, so- 
dan. AT. AC. AM/FM. 
cass. tiK. cruise. 57,888 
Can 1-800-743-9502. Oir 
! CHEVY, 90 Lumina so- 
I dan. AT. AC. AM/FM. 

' cass. PS. PB. 513.486. ^ 
Can 1-800-743-0502. Oir 
CHEVY. 99 Tdhoo. AT.' AC"! . 
cruise. AWFM cass. CO ' 
alarm. PS. PW. 524.908! 
Con ^•e00.743•950^. Olf 
~CHevv. Berena. iwo. ' 

1 1 1.409 miles, fair cond. . 
BANK REPO: Taking bids F 
through 12/7/DO Call 
Amy 676-6069. . 

E-MAIL your Classified ad ii 
- - lousai 
twlnadOmfcren.net 


GUARANTEED 

ADS 

The Times News ' 
guarantees to sell 
merchandise, 
automotive In 7 
days and real 
estate In 15 days 
or rerun the ad an 
additional 7 days. 
There Is a 53 extra 
feefortheguaran- 
I tee package. Ads 
- m^ be cancelled 
early for customer 
convenience but 
the charge will 
remain the same. 


■I dassiiiM aeosniswo (mm 
•■ in. Mm«on« would hwoni 
It. Call 73>093t. 


HONDA CIVIC LX ‘95, 
loadod. 58800. Going on 
omission. 679-3817 
HONDA ‘90 Accord LX 

5 spd. llOKmis. Loadodlll 
54400, 734-0765 msg. 
HONDA Civic 99, DX, AC. 

P‘W staonng. CD player. 
2 door, whiio, 28k mis. 
58495. Toyota ‘94 Camty 
L£ V-6. 4 dr. white. 94k 
mis. Loadadll $5995. 

VW ‘90 CofTodo G60 Teal. 
Super chergod. 54995 
Call 731-2464. dIrB 
HONDA Crvic, 1 994. 4 dr , 
82 K ftv.. $5,900. 5 spd., 
good cond., 733-3245 J 
HONDA. '96. Accord EX, 
low ml.. PW Windows's 
I skylight, all looihor. secu- 
I rity system & now tiros. 
Sl1.50a'ofter.733-390l.« 
HONDA. '99, CMC EX. 9K 
milos. 30«mpg, 5 spd. 
AC.eruiso. CD, 736-0871. 
isuzu • impulsa. '88, PW 

6 mirrors.Nico car in grat 
shape, 51499. 678-8097, 

LINCOLN - 1991 MarkVil.' 
burgundy, loaded. 
S480Ci/e«Of. 732-5479, 


— EE '00 

FORD BRONCO '01 

Can Ekfon 0 431-2968 

^RCEOes, 1 082. 3808L, 
rod w/black Intarfor. hard- 
top, convertible, great car 
to drfvel $5950. 734-9381 . 
Mercury - ‘93 Tracer 
wagon, AT. AC. 103K 
•milos. 53500/olfsr. Call 
543-2370.I 

NISSAN '03 Maxima SE 
V-6.AT.AC.Am/FM 
cassette. Sun roof. Secu- 
rtly system. LoededllExc. 
cond. 324-6767 eves. 
OLDS. 1093, Delta 88 Roy- 
ale. 120 K mb., exc. cond. 
$5.000. 734-8863,a 
OLDSMOB'iLE 88.‘t093' 
crulto, AC. PL ,P6, 20 
m.p.g„ oxc. cond., 54.995. I 
Cell 733-4726JI j 

TONTIAC, 09 Grand 
sedan, AT, AC, AM. 
case, PS. PB. $11. 

Call 1-800-743-0502. DL 
SUBARU 
S spd. Ne 
{Pints. SI 500, 733-2487 ~ 
SUBARU, 

CD, over 
cond. Low mb. '324-1 167. 
SUZUKI *94 Sldekldc JU ‘ 

I .LoedsdII Book Is $5900' 

I aelltorS4900.324-7607m 
TOYOTA Cemry. 1906, 

AT. 52k ml, $7500. Vety 

dean, ■» now. 420karke4 

TOYOTA Supra, ‘88, red, 
new lirae. rebuilt engine. 
54500. Call 734-8404,fl 


Wr, Super Battle, 74. re- 
bum onglna, new brakes. 
2 eet of tiree on rime, 
54000. S4 3-S504, eves. 

I ’ 1053 

IMPORT ft SPORTS 
CARS 

CHevv. 1S8B Corvm 


.coupe, 6 epd, Sebring Sil- 
ver. leather, all optfont, 
atwaya geragad. 8K miles, 
atautne leaeo pmte of 
5811 per mo. for 10 mo’s 
or pay off $46,000. Call 
Lafry324-5877or 
324-2^8 


llilF 


2001 SUBARU 

....... . 



VEHICLE outlet! 

FORD i 

dodgi; 

GHIC j 

. Sales • Service | 
Accessorfes * Detail | 

,;-,.:fe 6 - 3 i 3!25 .1 

^441 lUmberly Rd. • l^ln Falls. ID 8330 





The Mother Of All Truck^ 




Dodge Different 

See todoye ad lo the Bporte Section, 

Con-Pav ~ 

rsJi^iN' 

1 


MOTORS ' 

* r!M Avfimr- . Twin • T.'ll-KHIIIl * 


Pka Tbe, Tide & Dealer 06c 
Advoibed pricing esdJiro December 10, SOOb 


SUBARU 




. - *tV 

r.' 


Clirj§cma§ HQmc 

. At. Gary ’y 
Freeway R\/ 



cwir le-t «rp ... “ rl., C.i.y •« ta.mly ol Drahrthipi. 

t«lr IB2 OfF IWTERSTATi BA • TWIN FAllS - l■800•826-S336 - www.aoryiwctllanj., 












1.2000 nMln.,T.IIFA.Jd<l» E-15 


Before you buy a late model used Ford Truck 
anywhere else, let Jules Harrison sell you a new 
Ford Truck for the same price! 


New Fold F-250XIT 4x4 



6.8L V- 10, Auto, cab steps, camper package, 
AM/FM cassette & CD, keyless entry! 

Save! 



S *7,800 

^S3,99S 

6.«LV-J0.Xtr.A.M/EVI Mewo With 

0% *5,800 

S" ^17,935 

S*#,400 

^10,995 

CD/casseite.auxheai.androrAC .' 

XI. S|wrt Group, with rVCouisc. lilt. A.M/F.M 
itennt will) aBsctlr.mrHxail cOTrwt; 

A.M/h.M stereo. ,\1. trim. ’..i|. FFI. 


SE New Ford Mustang | NewFoid^aisSE 


Pri^ced 

From 


%000 ^A %000 S%SOO 


6-way pnwa seal. 3n V-6. 4Ul«i, IHV Ht PDl, 


Sjx7fi groujviVt; CD |'lj\vr. IWl’Dl. cna-c/iilC. 0>inf..rt 

pus'vr M-.U. foiKXr kc^Wcnin; n-.ir sjxiilff, 

•Alia reluit. Priic J„„ S» liik d„|„ J.KOmniuii,,., fre of SI 10. 


riced Sf4 OOC Plus 
rom **fJJJ5.9%APR 

Oniifort group, sport group, tear »(K>ilcr. 



HARRISON Ouantv usea VBhieles. 










LMTIHIIM MOTORS 





1 



1 

1 


""I 1 

1 ! 

1. 






t 1 

1. Ji i 

j 




With Any Vehicle 
Purehase You'll “ 
Receive A Pra>Paid 



2001 DODGE 
STRATUS 

SlMkllDSII.CoIcRSj|m*$Sp(fdTHrMiU«n • AlrCondiumnt 

• AM/nt CiMlit • P»rt Hiiidewi, locb k Minen • TnilM Caairel 

• DjjI Air Bjp • J Mutiiniy • ]( Hnt ilNitidf AuJitinn 

retail^21660 

TOTAL SAVINOS ^4672 


^16988 

•'o«‘ ^0 Down ^259 mo. 

QSm 


2001 DODGE 
INTREPID SE 

Siwk IIO(^ Col«R White • AgiOouilcTaRialutoA * PofcrWlA* 
itom, locks k Mifwti • CwUe CotHrel • AACTM OiKtWCO* Oiul 
Alt asgs • J irejf, J4,0» Mile Wstrinly « :♦ Jteif RcsdiideAssiiUnn 

RETAIL ^243 8Q 
TOTAL SAVINGS ^3592 


2001 DODGE 1500 
CLUB CAB 4x4 

Slock IIT«14IX Col OR While* Air Cotidillonbg • CniUe Core 
,(foi • Till Stetriu* Poieer Wind owsft Locks* Due] Alt B«m 
*3 YrLr.S&OOOMtlc Wsnuly » 34 Hoot Rosdside Auisiutco 

RETAIL ^32980 
TOTAL SAVINGS *8492 


2001 DODGE 
DURANGO 

Slock nD2'9k Celcc tlslbosi * Asrhaulk Ttanissiai • Ait Coodito- 

S « CniM • m • IWn lecU wiadm A Mitfon > V4 iMtse • Disl 
Btp * ) TodJUa Mlk WiRBlj k 34 Host btdtide Ami^ 

RETAIL *351 70 
TOTAL SAVINGS *7482 



1 996 GMC 
SONOMA 

WAS $9988 ~ SAVE $3000 



MA I P I ' 

M0» f t FflR ^ 


' DOWN ^389mo. 



1998 FORD 
TAURUS 4 DR. 

VIMS $14988 ~ SAVE $4000 


1998MAZI VB4000 
CLUB CAB 4x4 PICKUP 

WAS $17988 ~ SAVE $4000 


^10988 OR LI $13988 OR 


Slock »H4H.lUt>n4inilR;ffai uliu«.Tii.dib<(e(t&ai)tt4Dnbr 

UK (n 01)140} tn M kcl>>y I* A* aaiiiMr r^ML 9.H% APR. Na 

irmiL 72 aoiiklT i.mna ■ M ULw nranli. 


1 Prices Effective thru 
jSaturday, Dec. 9, 2000 



USttlUi 


CHRYSLER '• PLYMOUTH 
• DODGE • JEEP • DODGE TRUCK 

^ 'Unil iubjirci lo prior sole oi lease 0 

510 2nd Ave. 5. • Twm Falls, Idaho • 733-5776\ acquisition fee of $550.00 nol in'di 

www.lathammotors.com ) Pmehme